X-ray variability of HD 189733 across eight years of XMM-Newton observations
I. Pillitteri (1), G. Micela (1), A. Maggio (1), S. Sciortino (1), and, J. Lopez-Santiago (2) ((1) INAF-Osservatorio Astronomico di Palermo, Italy, (2) Signal Processing Group Dpt. of Signal Theory, Communications,, Universidad Carlos III, Madrid, Spain)

TL;DR
This study analyzes eight years of XMM-Newton X-ray observations of HD 189733 A, revealing stable coronal emission with occasional flares, a lack of activity cycles, and potential star-planet interaction effects influencing flare energies.
Contribution
It provides a detailed characterization of HD 189733 A's coronal activity, flare energy distribution, and suggests possible star-planet interaction effects on X-ray emission.
Findings
Coronal temperature averages 0.4 keV, rising to 0.9 keV during flares.
No significant flux or hardness variation over months to years.
Flares around planetary eclipses tend to be more energetic.
Abstract
The characterization of exoplanets, their formation, evolution, and chemical changes is tightly linked to our knowledge of their host stars. In particular, stellar X-rays and UV emission have a strong impact on the dynamical and chemical evolution of planetary atmospheres. We analyzed 25 XMM-Newton observations encompassing about eight years and totaling about 958 ks in order to study the X-ray emission of HD 189733 A. We find that the corona of HD 189733 A has an average temperature of 0.4 keV and it is only during flares that the mean temperature increases to 0.9 keV. Apart from the flares, there is no significant change in the flux and hardness of the coronal emission on a timescale of several months to years. Thus, we conclude that there is no detectable activity cycle on such timescales. We identified the flares and built their energy distribution. The number of flares observed…
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