On Stellar Coronae and Solar Active Regions

Based on Yohkoh Soft X-Ray Telescope (SXT) observations of the Sun near peak activity level obtained on 1992 January 6, we search for coronal structures that have emission measure distributions EM(T ) that match the observed stellar coronal emission measure distributions derived for the intermediate-activity stars v Eri (K2 V) and m Boo A (G8 V) from Extreme Ultraviolet Explorer spectro- scopic observations. We —nd that the temperatures of the peaks of the observed stellar distributions EM(T ), as well as their slopes in the temperature range are very similar to those 6.0 ( log T ( 6.5, obtain... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Jeremy J. Drake
Antonio Maggio
Giovanni Peres
Salvatore Orlando
J. Martin Laming
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2000
Schlagwörter: FORTHEM Alliance / NEANIAS Space Research Community / Netherlands / Space and Planetary Science / Astronomy and Astrophysics
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27200847
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://www.openaccessrepository.it/record/98449

Based on Yohkoh Soft X-Ray Telescope (SXT) observations of the Sun near peak activity level obtained on 1992 January 6, we search for coronal structures that have emission measure distributions EM(T ) that match the observed stellar coronal emission measure distributions derived for the intermediate-activity stars v Eri (K2 V) and m Boo A (G8 V) from Extreme Ultraviolet Explorer spectro- scopic observations. We —nd that the temperatures of the peaks of the observed stellar distributions EM(T ), as well as their slopes in the temperature range are very similar to those 6.0 ( log T ( 6.5, obtained for the brightest of the solar active regions in the 1992 January 6 SXT images. The observed slopes correspond approximately to EM P T b with b D 4, which is much steeper than predicted by static, uniformly heated loop models. Plasma densities in the coronae of v Eri and m Boo A are also observed to be essentially the same as the plasma densities typical of solar active regions. These data provide the best observational support yet obtained for the hypothesis that solar-like stars up to the activity levels of v Eri (K2 V) and m Boo A are dominated by active regions similar to, though possibly considerably larger than, those observed on the Sun. The surface —lling factor of bright active regions needed to explain the observed stellar emission measures is approximately unity. We speculate on the scenario in which small-scale ii nano—ares ˇˇ dominate the heating of active regions up to activity levels similar to those of v Eri (K2 V) and m Boo A. At higher activity levels still, the interactions of the active regions themselves may lead to increasing —aring on larger scales that is responsible for heating plasma to the observed coronal temperatures of on very active stars. Observations of X-ray and T Z 107 K EUV light curves using more sensitive instruments than are currently available, together with determi- nations of plasma densities over the full range of coronal temperatures (106¨107 K and higher), will be important to ...