Observations and modeling of spectral line asymmetries in stellar flares
Ji\v{r}\'i Wollmann, Petr Heinzel, Petr Kab\'ath

TL;DR
This study models spectral line asymmetries in stellar flares, specifically using non-LTE radiative transfer to explain observed red wing asymmetries in Hα lines on the star AD Leo, linking them to coronal rain phenomena.
Contribution
It introduces a novel modeling approach of stellar flare spectral asymmetries using coronal rain concepts, filling a gap in understanding red asymmetries in stellar flare spectra.
Findings
Observed red wing asymmetries up to 50 km/s during flares.
Synthetic profiles from the model match observed asymmetries.
Model supports coronal rain as the cause of red wing asymmetries.
Abstract
Stellar flares are energetic events occurring in stellar atmospheres. They have been observed on various stars using photometric light curves and spectra. On some cool stars, flares tend to release substantially more energy compared to solar flares. Spectroscopic observations have revealed that some spectral lines, aside from an enhancement and broadening, exhibit asymmetry in their profile. Asymmetries with enhanced blue wings are often associated with the presence of coronal mass ejections while the origin of the red asymmetries is currently not well understood. A few mechanisms have been suggested but no modeling has been performed yet. We observed the dMe star AD Leo using the 2-meter Perek telescope at Ond\v{r}ejov observatory, with simultaneous photometric light curves. In analogy with solar flares, we model the H line emergent from an extensive arcade of cool flare loops…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astro and Planetary Science
