X-rays from Stars and Planetary Systems
Jeremy J. Drake

TL;DR
This paper reviews two decades of Chandra X-ray Observatory findings on stars and planetary systems, highlighting diverse X-ray phenomena from planets to stellar remnants and their implications for astrophysics.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of Chandra's contributions to understanding stellar and planetary X-ray emissions across different evolutionary stages and system types.
Findings
Detection of X-ray aurorae on Jupiter
Insights into magnetic dynamos in stars
X-ray emission mechanisms in massive stars
Abstract
The Chandra X-ray Observatory has completed a remarkable twenty years in orbit. A large part of the science program of Chandra during this time has involved the study of stars and their planetary systems. This primer aims to give the reader a taste of the enormous range of stellar and planetary astrophysics that Chandra has enabled. Beginning with a tour of the X-ray solar system zoo, including the stunning pulsating X-ray aurorae of Jupiter, we then move on to the hot million-degree outer atmospheres of stars like our own Sun, whose X-ray emission is driven by an internal magnetic dynamo. The same emission processes are also vigorously present in the youngest stars, and we highlight some Chandra observations and results on nascent stellar and planetary systems. Chandra surveys and high-resolution spectroscopy of massive stars have provided a new window on the means by which they…
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