Occurrence rate of stellar Type II radio bursts from a 100 star-year search for coronal mass ejections
David C. Konijn, Harish K. Vedantham, Cyril Tasse, Timothy W. Shimwell, Martin J. Hardcastle, Joseph R. Callingham, Ekaterina Ilin, Alexander Drabent, Philippe Zarka, Floris F.S. van der Tak, Sanne Bloot

TL;DR
This study conducted the largest unbiased search for stellar Type II radio bursts associated with CMEs, detecting two events and estimating their occurrence rate, suggesting such bursts are more common than previously thought but limited by sensitivity.
Contribution
It provides the first constraints on the occurrence rate of stellar Type II radio bursts and compares their luminosity distribution to solar analogs, highlighting detection limitations.
Findings
Detected two stellar Type II radio bursts.
Estimated a normalised burst occurrence rate of about one per year.
Found the luminosity distribution consistent with solar Type II bursts.
Abstract
Coronal mass ejections (CMEs) are major drivers of space weather in the Solar System, but their occurrence rate on other stars is unknown. A characteristic (deca-)metric radio burst with a time-frequency drift, known as a Type II radio burst, is a key observational signature of CMEs. We searched a total of 107 years of stellar data using time-frequency spectra that targeted all known stars within 100 parsecs in the LOFAR Two Metre Sky Survey (LoTSS) up to May 2023. This resulted in the largest unbiased search for circularly polarised stellar Type II metric radio bursts to date, with a typical 3 sensitivity of 2.5 mJy for an integration time of 1 minute. We detected two drifting stellar radio bursts: the published 2-minute burst from the M dwarf StKM 1-1262 and a new 13-minute burst from the M dwarf LP 215-56. The new burst is characterised by a drift rate of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research
