Corona and XUV emission modelling of the Sun and Sun-like stars
Munehito Shoda, Shinsuke Takasao

TL;DR
This study develops a detailed simulation model of Sun-like stars' XUV emission, validating it against solar observations and deriving scaling relations to estimate EUV luminosity from X-ray data, aiding understanding of stellar atmospheres.
Contribution
It introduces a high-resolution coronal heating model that reproduces observed spectra and relations, providing a new method to estimate stellar EUV luminosity from X-ray observations.
Findings
The model reproduces the solar XUV spectrum below the Lyman edge.
A scaling relation between EUV and X-ray luminosities is established.
The model explains the Rossby number and X-ray luminosity relation.
Abstract
The X-ray and extreme-ultraviolet (EUV) emissions from the low-mass stars significantly affect the evolution of the planetary atmosphere. However, it is, observationally difficult to constrain the stellar high-energy emission because of the strong interstellar extinction of EUV photons. In this study, we simulate the XUV (X-ray+EUV) emission from the Sun-like stars by extending the solar coronal heating model that self-consistently solves, with sufficiently high resolution, the surface-to-coronal energy transport, turbulent coronal heating, and coronal thermal response by conduction and radiation. The simulations are performed with a range of loop lengths and magnetic filling factors at the stellar surface. With the solar parameters, the model reproduces the observed solar XUV spectrum below the Lyman edge, thus validating its capability of predicting the XUV spectra of other Sun-like…
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