Stellar flares
Adam F. Kowalski (1,2,3) ((1) University of Colorado, (2) National, Solar Observatory, (3) Laboratory for Atmospheric, Space Physics)

TL;DR
This review summarizes recent advances in understanding stellar flares, their observational characteristics, modeling efforts, and implications for space weather and exoplanet habitability, highlighting ongoing challenges and future questions.
Contribution
The paper provides a comprehensive overview of decades of stellar flare research, emphasizing recent progress in multi-wavelength observations and radiation-hydrodynamic modeling.
Findings
White-light stellar flares are now recognized as significant in astrophysics.
Recent models incorporate advanced radiation-hydrodynamics techniques.
Stellar flares impact space weather and exoplanet habitability studies.
Abstract
Magnetic storms on stars manifest as remarkable, randomly occurring changes of the luminosity over durations that are tiny in comparison to the normal evolution of stars. These stellar flares are bursts of electromagnetic radiation from X-ray to radio wavelengths, and they occur on most stars with outer convection zones. They are analogous to the events on the Sun known as solar flares, which impact our everyday life and modern technological society. Stellar flares, however, can attain much greater energies than those on the Sun. Despite this, we think that these phenomena are rather similar in origin to solar flares, which result from a catastrophic conversion of latent magnetic field energy into atmospheric heating within a region that is relatively small in comparison to normal stellar sizes. We review the last several decades of stellar flare research. We summarize multi-wavelength…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astro and Planetary Science
