Universal Scaling Laws for Solar and Stellar Atmospheric Heating
Shin Toriumi, Vladimir S. Airapetian

TL;DR
This study uncovers universal power-law relations between magnetic flux and irradiance across the Sun and sun-like stars, revealing insights into the common mechanisms of atmospheric heating from the chromosphere to the corona.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the atmospheric heating processes in the Sun and similar stars follow a universal pattern, with a cycle-dependent efficiency, based on a decade-long observational survey.
Findings
Power-law relations between magnetic flux and irradiance vary with temperature.
The power-law exponent decreases from corona to chromosphere.
The exponent shows solar cycle dependence, smallest at activity maximum.
Abstract
The Sun and sun-like stars commonly host the multi-million-Kelvin coronae and the 10,000-Kelvin chromospheres. These extremely hot gases generate X-ray and Extreme Ultraviolet emissions that may impact the erosion and chemistry of (exo)planetary atmospheres, influencing the climate and conditions of habitability. However, the mechanism of coronal and chromospheric heating is still poorly understood. While the magnetic field most probably plays a key role in driving and transporting energy from the stellar surface upwards, it is not clear if the atmospheric heating mechanisms of the Sun and active sun-like stars can be described in a unified manner. To this end, we report on a systematic survey of the responses of solar and stellar atmospheres to surface magnetic flux over a wide range of temperatures. By analyzing 10 years of multi-wavelength synoptic observations of the Sun, we reveal…
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