9:23 AM - 9:45 AM
[PEM14-02] Detecting stellar CMEs through post-flare coronal dimmings
★Invited Papers
Keywords:Sun, Stars, Coronal mass ejections
While CMEs from our Sun are regularly imaged by white-light coronagraphs, and their speeds and masses are derived from these observations, for stars such direct imaging is not possible. Here, we present a new approach to detect stellar mass ejections through post-flare coronal dimmings. To this aim, we study Sun-as-a-star broad-band EUV light curves derived from SDO’s Extreme ultraviolet Variability Experiment (EVE) as a testbed to investigate whether coronal dimmings can be also observed on stars and used for stellar CME detection. We demonstrate that large eruptive solar flares are with a high probability associated with a post-flare coronal dimming, with intensity drops in the 15-25 nm full-Sun light curves up to 5%. Searching for similar patterns of post-flare dimmings in the X-ray and EUV light curves of solar-like and late-type stars, we identify 21 stellar CME candidates. The derived intensity drops are an order of magnitude larger than for the Sun, suggesting that in the detected events a substantial part of the stellar corona gets ejected by the CME.
This study is published in: A.M. Veronig, P. Odert, M. Leitzinger, K. Dissauer, N. Fleck, H.S. Hudson, Indications of stellar coronal mass ejections through coronal dimmings, Nature Astronomy 5, 697-706 (2021). https://www.nature.com/articles/s41550-021-01345-9