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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Modeling an X-ray Flare on Proxima Centauri: evidence of two flaring loop components and of two heating mechanisms at work

Marc AudardManuel GuedelFabio RealeGiovanni Peres

subject

Work (thermodynamics)010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesAstrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical PhenomenaFOS: Physical sciencesAstrophysicsAstrophysics01 natural scienceslaw.inventionlaw0103 physical sciencesAstrophysics::Solar and Stellar AstrophysicsLoop modelingstars: flare stars: coronae X-rays: stars hydrodynamics010303 astronomy & astrophysics0105 earth and related environmental sciencesPhysicsAstrophysics (astro-ph)Astronomy and AstrophysicsLight curveCoronaPulse (physics)Loop (topology)13. Climate actionSpace and Planetary ScienceEvent (particle physics)Flare

description

We model in detail a flare observed on Proxima Centauri with the EPIC-PN on board XMM-Newton at high statistics and high time resolution and coverage. Time-dependent hydrodynamic loop modeling is used to describe the rise and peak of the light curve, and a large fraction of the decay, including its change of slope and a secondary maximum, over a duration of more than 2 hours. The light curve, the emission measure and the temperature derived from the data allow us to constrain the loop morphology and the heating function and to show that this flare can be described with two components: a major one triggered by an intense heat pulse injected in a single flaring loop with half-length ~1.0 10^{10} cm, the other one by less intense heat pulses released after about 1/2 hour since the first one in related loop systems, probably arcades, with the same half-length. The heat functions of the two loop systems appear be very similar: an intense pulse located at the loop footpoints followed by a low gradual decay distributed in corona. The latter result and the similarity to at least one solar event (the Bastille Day flare in 2000) indicate that this pattern may be common to solar and stellar flares, in wide generality.

10.1051/0004-6361:20034027http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0312267