A Study of Flares in the Ultra-Cool Regime from SPECULOOS-South
C. A. Murray, D. Queloz, M. Gillon, B. O. Demory, A. H. M. J. Triaud,, J. de Wit, A. Burdanov, P. Chinchilla, L. Delrez, G. Dransfield, E. Ducrot,, L. J. Garcia, Y. G\'omez Maqueo Chew, M. N. G\"unther, E. Jehin, J. McCormac,, P. Niraula, P. P. Pedersen, F. J. Pozuelos

TL;DR
This study analyzes photometric flares on 154 ultra-cool and late-M dwarfs, revealing flare frequency dependence on spectral type and rotation, with implications for planetary habitability around these stars.
Contribution
It presents the largest flare dataset for ultra-cool dwarfs, extending flare activity understanding into the ultra-cool regime and analyzing rotation-flare relationships.
Findings
M5-M7 stars are more likely to flare than other M types.
Flares are detectable down to 1% amplitude, especially on cooler stars.
Very red dwarfs show fewer high-energy flares.
Abstract
We present a study of photometric flares on 154 low-mass () objects observed by the SPECULOOS-South Observatory from 1st June 2018 to 23rd March 2020. In this sample we identify 85 flaring objects, ranging in spectral type from M4 to L0. We detect 234 flares in this sample, with energies between and erg, using both automated and manual methods. With this work, we present the largest photometric sample of flares on late-M and ultra-cool dwarfs to date. By extending previous M dwarf flare studies into the ultra-cool regime, we find M5-M7 stars are more likely to flare than both earlier, and later, M dwarfs. By performing artificial flare injection-recovery tests we demonstrate that we can detect a significant proportion of flares down to an amplitude of 1 per cent, and we are most sensitive to flares on the coolest stars. Our results…
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