No CrossRef data available.
Article contents
Radio Emission from Flares in Single Late-type Stars
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 April 2016
Abstract
Radio observations provide the most direct information on non-thermal electrons in stellar flares and in the coronae of late-type stars. Radio emissions of single main-sequence F, G, and of many K stars have recently been discovered, in addition to the well-known dwarf M stars. Their long-duration radio flares with low circular polarization, slow variations and broad bandwidth can be attributed to gyrosynchrotron emission of mildly relativistic electrons. The same holds for the low-level (‘quiescent’) radio emission. On the other hand, highly polarized radio flares of M stars have been interpreted by coherent emissions from loss-cone instabilities of magnetically trapped electrons. These conjectures are consistent with recent VLBI observations. The identification of the radio emission process allows to estimate the high-energy component of the flare and compare it to the total flare energy. The weakly polarized radio emission may serve as a proxy for hard X-ray signatures of relativistic electrons. The fraction of primary energy released into energetic electrons then appears to be large and similar to solar flares.
- Type
- Flares in Late-type Stars: Radio and Optical
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Springer-Verlag 1995