New Observational Constraints on the Winds of M Dwarf Stars
Brian E. Wood, Hans-Reinhard Mueller, Seth Redfield, Fallon Konow,, Hunter Vannier, Jeffrey L. Linsky, Allison Youngblood, Aline A. Vidotto,, Moira Jardine, Julian D. Alvarado-Gomez, Jeremy J. Drake

TL;DR
This study uses Hubble Space Telescope UV spectra to measure stellar winds of M dwarf stars, revealing generally weak winds with some exceptions, challenging previous assumptions about stellar activity and planetary habitability.
Contribution
First observational constraints on M dwarf stellar winds using astrospheric absorption, showing wind strengths and their relation to stellar activity.
Findings
Most M dwarfs have winds weaker or comparable to the Sun.
Two M dwarfs exhibit significantly stronger winds.
Solar flare/CME relation does not extend to M dwarfs.
Abstract
High resolution UV spectra of stellar H I Lyman-alpha lines from the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) provide observational constraints on the winds of coronal main sequence stars, thanks to an astrospheric absorption signature created by the interaction between the stellar winds and the interstellar medium. We report the results of a new HST survey of M dwarf stars, yielding six new detections of astrospheric absorption. We estimate mass-loss rates for these detections, and upper limits for nondetections. These new constraints allow us to characterize the nature of M dwarf winds and their dependence on coronal activity for the first time. For a clear majority of the M dwarfs, we find winds that are weaker or comparable in strength to that of the Sun, i.e. Mdot<=1 Mdot_sun. However, two of the M dwarfs have much stronger winds: YZ CMi (M4 Ve; Mdot=30 Mdot_sun) and GJ 15AB (M2 V+M3.5 V;…
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