Modeling Balmer line signatures of stellar CMEs
Martin Leitzinger, Petra Odert, Petr Heinzel

TL;DR
This paper models Balmer line signatures of stellar CMEs using cloud modeling techniques on a young star, revealing physical parameters and showing that stellar filaments can appear in emission, unlike solar prominences.
Contribution
It applies solar cloud modeling methods to stellar CMEs, providing the first detailed physical parameter distributions for such events on stars.
Findings
Parameters are at the upper range of solar prominence values.
Temperature and area are higher than typical solar prominences.
Filaments can appear in emission on dMe stars.
Abstract
From the Sun we know that coronal mass ejections (CMEs) are a transient phenomenon, often correlated with flares. They have an impact on solar mass- and angular momentum loss, and therefore solar evolution, and make a significant part of space weather. The same is true for stars, but stellar CMEs are still not well constrained, although new methodologies have been established, and new detections presented in the recent past. So far, probable detections of stellar CMEs have been presented, but their physical parameters which are not directly accessible from observations, such as electron density, optical thickness, temperature, etc., have been so far not determined for the majority of known events. We apply cloud modeling, as commonly used on the Sun, to a known event from the literature, detected on the young dMe star V374 Peg. This event manifests itself in extra emission on the blue…
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