Observational signs of limited flare area variation and peak flare temperatures estimations in main-sequence flaring stars
K. Bicz, R. Falewicz, P. Heinzel, P. Pre\'s, D. Mo\'zdzierski, A. Pigulski, D. Marchev, K. Kotysz, T. Atanasova, G. Yordanova, A. Georgiev

TL;DR
This study investigates the variability of flare areas and peak temperatures in main-sequence stars, revealing limited area changes and developing a model to estimate peak flare temperatures from star and flare data, enhancing understanding of stellar flare energetics.
Contribution
The paper introduces a semi-empirical grid linking star temperature and flare amplitude to peak flare temperature, based on multicolor observations and data analysis.
Findings
Flare areas changed by 10%-61%, mostly below 30%.
Peak flare temperatures ranged from 5700 K to 17500 K in observed flares.
Most flares had peak temperatures around 11100 K.
Abstract
In the study of stellar flares, traditional method of calculating total energy emitted in the continuum assumes the emission originating from a narrow chromospheric condensation region with a constant temperature of 10000 K and variable flare area. However, based on multicolor data from 7 new flares observed in Bia{\l}k\'ow and Shumen observatory and 8 flares from (Howard et al., 2020) observed on 10 main-sequence stars (spectral types M5.5V to K5V) we show that flare areas had a relative change in the range of 10% - 61% (for more than half of the flares this value did not exceed 30%) throughout the events except for the impulsive phase, and had values starting from 50 +/- 30 ppm to 300 +/- 150 ppm for our new flares and from 380 +/- 200 ppm to 7600 +/- 3000 ppm from (Howard et al., 2020) data, while their temperature increased on average by the factor 2.5. The peak flare temperatures…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Spacecraft and Cryogenic Technologies · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
