Spectroscopic monitoring detects phase-locked flares to Proxima d and flare-intensity modulation by Proxima b, producing a -16 G polar field estimate for the inner planet via Poynting-flux modeling.
New rotation period measurements for M dwarfs in the southern hemisphere: an abundance of slowly rotating, fully convective stars
2 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
Stellar rotation periods are valuable both for constraining models of angular momentum loss and for under- standing how magnetic features impact inferences of exoplanet parameters. Building on our previous work in the northern hemisphere, we have used long-term, ground-based photometric monitoring from the MEarth Observatory to measure 234 rotation periods for nearby, southern hemisphere M dwarfs. Notable examples include the exoplanet hosts GJ 1132, LHS 1140, and Proxima Centauri. We find excellent agreement between our data and K2 photometry for the overlapping subset. Amongst the sample of stars with the highest quality datasets, we recover periods in 66%; as the length of the dataset increases, our recovery rate approaches 100%. The longest rotation periods we detect are around 140 days, which we suggest represent the periods that are reached when M dwarfs are as old as the local thick disk (about 9 Gyr).
fields
astro-ph.EP 2verdicts
UNVERDICTED 2representative citing papers
Swift observations find LHS 1140b receives <2% of Earth's NUV flux but a FUV/NUV ratio 100-200 times higher, with the host star showing low variability.
citing papers explorer
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Star-planet interaction in the Proxima system
Spectroscopic monitoring detects phase-locked flares to Proxima d and flare-intensity modulation by Proxima b, producing a -16 G polar field estimate for the inner planet via Poynting-flux modeling.
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The high-energy radiation environment of the habitable-zone super-Earth LHS 1140b
Swift observations find LHS 1140b receives <2% of Earth's NUV flux but a FUV/NUV ratio 100-200 times higher, with the host star showing low variability.