Stellar Proton Event-induced surface radiation dose as a constraint on the habitability of terrestrial exoplanets
Dimitra Atri

TL;DR
This study models how stellar proton events impact surface radiation on exoplanets, providing insights into their habitability by analyzing particle spectra and planetary magnetic effects.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive simulation framework to assess surface radiation doses from stellar proton events on exoplanets, considering spectral and planetary factors.
Findings
SPE spectrum significantly influences surface radiation dose.
Planetary magnetic field strength affects radiation shielding.
SPE fluence alone is insufficient to determine habitability.
Abstract
The discovery of terrestrial exoplanets orbiting in habitable zones around nearby stars has been one of the significant developments in modern astronomy. More than a dozen such planets, like Proxima Centauri b and TRAPPIST-1 e, are in close-in configurations and their proximity to the host star makes them highly sensitive to stellar activity. Episodic events such as flares have the potential to cause severe damage to close-in planets, adversely impacting their habitability. Flares on fast rotating young M stars occur up to 100 times more frequently than on G-type stars which makes their planets even more susceptible to stellar activity. Stellar Energetic Particles (SEPs) emanating from Stellar Proton Events (SPEs) cause atmospheric damage (erosion and photochemical changes), and produce secondary particles, which in turn results in enhanced radiation dosage on planetary surfaces. We…
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