# Observation of a possible superflare on Proxima Centauri

**Authors:** John F. Kielkopf, Rhodes Hart, Bradley D. Carter, Stephen C., Marsden

arXiv: 1904.06875 · 2019-04-24

## TL;DR

This paper reports the detection of a superflare on Proxima Centauri in near-infrared, with energy levels that could significantly impact the atmospheres of planets in its habitable zone.

## Contribution

First observation of a superflare on Proxima Centauri in near-infrared, demonstrating the star's potential for extreme stellar activity affecting nearby exoplanets.

## Key findings

- Detected a flare with at least 10% flux increase in near-infrared
- Flare energy exceeds stellar luminosity by 100 times
- Implications for extreme space weather on habitable zone planets

## Abstract

We report the observation on UT 2017.07.01 of an unusually powerful flare detected in near-infrared continuum photometry of Proxima Centauri. During a campaign monitoring the star for possible exoplanet transits, we identified an increase in Sloan i' flux leading to an observed peak at BJD 2457935.996 that was at least 10\% over pre-flare flux in this band. It was followed by a 2-component rapid decline in the first 100 seconds that became a slower exponential decay with time constant of 1350 seconds. A smaller flare event 1300 seconds after the first added an incremental peak flux increase of 1% of pre-flare flux. Since the onset of the flare was not fully time-resolved at a cadence of 62 seconds, its actual peak value is unknown but greater than the time-average over a single exposure of 20 seconds. The i' band is representative of broad optical and near-IR continuum flux over which the integrated energy of the flare is 100 times the stellar luminosity. This meets the criteria that established the concept of superflares on similar stars. The resulting implied ultraviolet flux and space weather could have had an extreme effect on the atmospheres of planets within the star's otherwise-habitable zone.

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1904.06875/full.md

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1904.06875/full.md

## References

34 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1904.06875/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1904.06875