# Structure and variability in the corona of the ultrafast rotator LO Peg

**Authors:** S. Lalitha, J. H. M. M. Schmitt, K. P. Singh

arXiv: 1702.03158 · 2017-05-31

## TL;DR

This study analyzes the coronal properties and variability of the ultrafast rotator LO Peg, revealing active regions, a significant flare, and coronal characteristics similar to other low-mass ultrafast rotators, highlighting magnetic activity effects.

## Contribution

It provides detailed X-ray observational analysis of LO Peg, including flare characteristics, coronal structure, and comparison with other ultrafast rotators, advancing understanding of magnetic activity in such stars.

## Key findings

- Detected significant X-ray variability and a large flare on LO Peg.
- Observed the Neupert effect during the flare.
- Coronal properties consistent with the inverse FIP effect.

## Abstract

Low-mass ultrafast rotators show the typical signatures of magnetic activity and are known to produce flares, probably as a result of magnetic reconnection. As a consequence, the coronae of these stars exhibit very large X-ray luminosities and high plasma temperatures, as well as a pronounced inverse FIP effect. To probe the relationship between the coronal properties with a spectral type of ultra-fast rotators with rotation period P < 1d, we analyse the K3 rapid-rotator LO Peg observed with XMM-Newton and compare it with other low-mass rapid rotators of spectral types G9-M1. We investigate the temporal evolution of coronal properties like the temperatures, emission measures, abundances, densities and the morphology of the involved coronal structures. We find two distinguishable levels of activity in the XMM-Newton observation of LO~Peg, which shows significant X-ray variability both in phase and amplitude, implying the presence of an evolving active region on the surface. The X-ray flux varies by 28%, possibly due to rotational modulation. During our observation, a large X-ray flare with a peak X-ray luminosity of 2E30 erg/s and an energy of 7.3E33 erg was observed. At the flare onset we obtain clear signatures for the occurrence of the Neupert effect. The flare plasma also shows an enhancement of iron by a factor of 2 during the rise and peak phase of the flare. Our modeling analysis suggests that the scale size of the flaring X-ray plasma is smaller than 0.5 R_star. Further, the flare loop length appears to be smaller than the pressure scale height of the flaring plasma. Our studies show that the X-ray properties of the LO~Peg are very similar to those of other low-mass ultrafast rotators, i.e., the X-ray luminosity is very close to saturation, its coronal abundances follow a trend of increasing abundance with increasing first ionisation potential, the so-called inverse FIP effect.

## Full text

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## Figures

23 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1702.03158/full.md

## References

53 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1702.03158/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1702.03158