2019ApJ...886...77P


Query : 2019ApJ...886...77P

2019ApJ...886...77P - Astrophys. J., 886, 77-77 (2019/December-1)

Predicting the extreme ultraviolet radiation environment of exoplanets around low-mass stars: GJ 832, GJ 176, and GJ 436.

PEACOCK S., BARMAN T., SHKOLNIK E.L., HAUSCHILDT P.H., BARON E. and FUHRMEISTER B.

Abstract (from CDS):

Correct estimates of stellar extreme ultraviolet (EUV; 100-1170 Å) flux are important for studying the photochemistry and stability of exoplanet atmospheres, as EUV radiation ionizes hydrogen and contributes to the heating, expansion, and potential escape of a planet's upper atmosphere. Contamination from interstellar hydrogen makes observing EUV emission from M stars particularly difficult, and impossible past 100 pc, and necessitates other means to predict the flux in this wavelength regime. We present EUV-infrared (100 Å-5.5 µm) synthetic spectra computed with the PHOENIX atmospheric code of three early M dwarf planet hosts: GJ 832 (M1.5 V), GJ 176 (M2.5 V), and GJ 436 (M3.5 V). These one-dimensional, semi-empirical, non-local thermodynamic equilibrium models include simple temperature prescriptions for the stellar chromosphere and transition region, from where ultraviolet (100-3008 Å) fluxes originate. We guide our models with Hubble Space Telescope far- and near-UV spectra and discuss the ability to constrain these models using Galaxy Evolution Explorer UV photometry. Our models closely reproduce the observations and predict the unobservable EUV spectrum at a wavelength resolution of <0.1 Å. The temperature profiles that best reproduce the observations for all three stars are described by nearly the same set of parameters, suggesting that early M-type stars may have similar thermal structures in their upper atmospheres. With an impending UV observation gap and the scarcity of observed EUV spectra for stars less luminous and more distant than the Sun, upper atmosphere models such as these are important for providing realistic spectra across short wavelengths and for advancing our understanding of the effects of radiation on planets orbiting M stars.

Abstract Copyright: © 2019. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

Journal keyword(s): Ultraviolet astronomy - M dwarf stars - Stellar chromospheres - Stellar activity

Simbad objects: 13

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Number of rows : 13
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 HD 285968 PM* 04 42 55.7750207949 +18 57 29.395947044 12.668 11.49 9.951 8.931 7.702 M2.5V 337 2
2 HD 33793 PM* 05 11 40.5898395497 -45 01 06.361734876 11.624 10.433 8.853 7.9 6.899 M1VIp 337 0
3 WASP-12b Pl 06 30 32.7966092352 +29 40 20.263502460           ~ 764 1
4 V* YY Gem BY* 07 34 37.4474327544 +31 52 10.179641496 11.60 10.56 9.27 7.69 6.67 M0.5VeFe-2 855 0
5 V* YZ CMi Er* 07 44 40.1723046464 +03 33 08.875227574 13.761 12.831 11.225 9.958 8.263 M4.0Ve 885 0
6 V* AD Leo Er* 10 19 36.2808181226 +19 52 12.010446571   10.82 9.52 9.19   dM3 1340 1
7 Ross 905 PM* 11 42 11.0933350978 +26 42 23.650782778   12.06 10.613 10.272 8.24 M3V 648 1
8 NAME Proxima Centauri b Pl 14 29 42.9461331854 -62 40 46.164680672           ~ 370 0
9 NAME Proxima Centauri Er* 14 29 42.9461331854 -62 40 46.164680672 14.21 12.95 11.13 9.45 7.41 M5.5Ve 1302 0
10 HD 197481 BY* 20 45 09.5324974119 -31 20 27.237889841   10.05 8.627 9.078 6.593 M1VeBa1 1160 0
11 HD 204961 PM* 21 33 33.9751191976 -49 00 32.399427028 11.359 10.176 8.672 7.665 6.479 M2/3V 291 1
12 V* EV Lac Er* 22 46 49.7312610268 +44 20 02.374381562   11.85 10.26 9.89   M4.0Ve 904 2
13 TRAPPIST-1 LM* 23 06 29.3684948589 -05 02 29.037301866     18.798 16.466 14.024 M7.5e 998 0

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