X-Ray Emission from the MUSCLES Exoplanet Host Stars
Abstract
The MUSCLES (Measurements of the Ultraviolet Spectral Characteristics of Low-mass Exoplanetary Systems) project is a multi-spectral-region investigation of the high-energy (UV/X-ray) radiation fields of K dwarf / M dwarf exoplanet host stars and how this radiation will influence the evolution of the exoplanet atmospheres. As part of this project we have used Chandra and XMM-Newton to study the X-ray emission from ten (7 M dwarf and 3 K dwarf), nearby (within 15 pc), low mass exoplanet hosts. Typically, we have coordinated the X-ray observations with HST-COS FUV and ground-based optical spectroscopy of the same targets. Even though these stars are generally considered to be inactive we find evidence for significant X-ray variability for many of the M dwarfs observed. In this poster we illustrate the coronal properties of the stars using example light-curves and spectral analyses. The UV and X-ray data are crucial input to the modeling the complete spectral energy distributions for exoplanet studies.This work was supported by Chandra grants GO4-15041X and GO5-16155X and NASA XMM grant NNX16AC09G to the University of Colorado at Boulder. The overall MUSCLES project was undertaken by HST GO programs 12464 and 13650 and supported by STScI grants HST-GO-12464.01 and HST-GO-13650.01 . P.C.S. is supported by an ESA Research Fellowship.
- Publication:
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19th Cambridge Workshop on Cool Stars, Stellar Systems, and the Sun (CS19)
- Pub Date:
- July 2016
- DOI:
- 10.5281/zenodo.59232
- Bibcode:
- 2016csss.confE.136B
- Keywords:
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- Exoplanet host stars;
- Coronal X-ray emission;
- Zenodo community cs19