Low-frequency monitoring of flare star binary CR Draconis: Long-term electron-cyclotron maser emission
J. R. Callingham, B. J. S. Pope, A. D. Feinstein, H. K. Vedantham, T., W. Shimwell, P. Zarka, C. Tasse, L. Lamy, K. Veken, S. Toet, J. Sabater, P., N. Best, R. J. van Weeren, H. J. A. R\"ottgering, T. P. Ray

TL;DR
This study presents the longest low-frequency radio monitoring of the M dwarf binary CR Draconis, revealing high detection rates of highly polarized electron-cyclotron maser emission with burst structures similar to planetary radio emissions.
Contribution
It provides the first long-term interferometric radio monitoring of CR Draconis, demonstrating persistent, highly polarized electron-cyclotron maser emission and detailed burst characteristics.
Findings
90% detection rate of low-frequency radio emission
Detection of bright, elliptically polarized bursts at 170 MHz
No clear periodicity in radio emission despite optical rotation period
Abstract
Recently detected coherent low-frequency radio emission from M dwarf systems shares phenomenological similarities with emission produced by magnetospheric processes from the gas giant planets of our Solar System. Such beamed electron-cyclotron maser emission can be driven by a star-planet interaction or a breakdown in co-rotation between a rotating plasma disk and a stellar magnetosphere. Both models suggest that the radio emission could be periodic. Here we present the longest low-frequency interferometric monitoring campaign of an M dwarf system, composed of twenty-one 8 hour epochs taken in two series of observing blocks separated by a year. We achieved a total on-source time of 6.5 days. We show that the M dwarf binary CR Draconis has a low-frequency 3 detection rate of 90% when a noise floor of 0.1 mJy is reached, with a median flux density of…
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