The white-light superflares from cool stars in GWAC triggers
Guang-Wei Li, Liang Wang, Hai-Long Yuan, Li-Ping Xin, Jing Wang, Chao, Wu, Hua-Li Li, Hasitieer Haerken, Wei-Hua Wang, Hong-Bo Cai, Xu-Hui Han, Yang, Xu, Lei Huang, Xiao-Meng Lu, Jian-Ying Bai, Xiang-Yu Wang, Zi-Gao Dai, En-Wei, Liang, and Jian-Yan Wei

TL;DR
This study analyzes 163 superflares from M-type stars observed by GWAC, revealing their energies, amplitudes, and correlations with stellar properties, and providing insights into the maximum flare energies of cool stars.
Contribution
It presents a comprehensive dataset of superflares from M2-L1 stars, combining multi-source data to explore flare energies, stellar age, and physical limits, which was previously less understood.
Findings
Flare energies range from 10^32.2 to 10^36.4 erg.
Flare energy correlates with stellar surface temperature.
Maximum flare energy relates to stellar hemispherical area.
Abstract
M-type stars are the ones that flare most frequently, but how big their maximum flare energy can reach is still unknown. We present 163 flares from 162 individual M2 through L1-type stars that triggered the GWAC, with flare energies ranging from to erg . The flare amplitudes range from to mag. Flare energy increases with stellar surface temperature () but both and equivalent duration seem to be independent of . Combining periods detected from light curves of TESS and K2, spectra from LAMOST, SDSS and the 2.16 m Telescope, and the Gaia DR3 data, we found that these GWAC flare stars are young. For the stars that have spectra, we found that these stars are in or very near to the saturation region, and is lower for M7-L1 stars than for M2-M6…
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