An A star on an M star during a flare within a flare
arXiv:1010.0452 · doi:10.1017/S1743921311015341
Abstract
M dwarfs produce explosive flare emission in the near-UV and optical continuum, and the mechanism responsible for this phenomenon is not well-understood. We present a near-UV/optical flare spectrum from the rise phase of a secondary flare, which occurred during the decay of a much larger flare. The newly formed flare emission resembles the spectrum of an early-type star, with the Balmer lines and continuum in absorption. We model this observation phenomonologically as a temperature bump (hot spot) near the photosphere of the M dwarf. The amount of heating implied by our model (ÎT_phot ~ 16,000K) is far more than predicted by chromospheric backwarming in current 1D RHD flare models (ÎT_phot ~ 1200K).
4 pages, 4 figures, submitted to the proceedings of IAU Symposium 273: "Physics of Sun and Star Spots", August 22-26, 2010, D.P. Choudhary and K.G. Strassmeier (eds.)