Are exoplanets orbiting m dwarfs extreme?
I gave an invited talk at Extreme Solar Systems IV in REYKJAVIK, ICELAND. However, please note that all talks were officially "invited" according to the organizers. M dwarf stars have long spin-down timescales, long activity lifetimes and persistent magnetic activity, all of which have imp...
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Format: | Conference Object |
Language: | unknown |
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2019
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Online Access: | https://hdl.handle.net/2144/40308 https://sites.northwestern.edu/iceland2019/ |
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author | Muirhead, Philip |
author_facet | Muirhead, Philip |
author_sort | Muirhead, Philip |
collection | Boston University: OpenBU |
description | I gave an invited talk at Extreme Solar Systems IV in REYKJAVIK, ICELAND. However, please note that all talks were officially "invited" according to the organizers. M dwarf stars have long spin-down timescales, long activity lifetimes and persistent magnetic activity, all of which have implications for the potential habitability of orbiting planets. I will present results from several research programs investigating M dwarf rotation, activity and evolution. I will discuss a new technique to measure chemical-kinematic ages of main-sequence M dwarf stars. We applied that technique to a variety of nearby M dwarfs, both planet hosts and non-planet hosts, and rapid (young) and slow (old) rotators. We find that relatively slow rotators (P 100 days) do not appear to be α enriched, indicating that they are not over 10 Gyrs old. Second, for the rapid rotators, we see clear evidence of Zeeman enhancement of Y-band Ti I lines as a function of Rossby number. While other activity indicators, such as H-α and X-ray emission, appear to saturate with low Rossby number, Zeeman enhancement does not, indicating that the saturation mechanism is confined to the chromosphere and corona. Finally, I will present new results on the M dwarf radius problem. Using spectral synthesis methods, we find that large magnetic star spot fractions are primarily responsible for observed discrepancies between model and measured stellar radii in fully convective M dwarf stars. As most M dwarfs appear discrepant, our results suggest the vast majority of M dwarfs have large spot fractions and correspondingly high localization of magnetic fields. Published version |
format | Conference Object |
genre | Iceland |
genre_facet | Iceland |
id | ftbostonuniv:oai:open.bu.edu:2144/40308 |
institution | Open Polar |
language | unknown |
op_collection_id | ftbostonuniv |
op_coverage | Reykjavik, Iceland |
op_relation | https://sites.northwestern.edu/iceland2019/ Philip Muirhead. 2019. "Are Exoplanets Orbiting M Dwarfs Extreme?." https://hdl.handle.net/2144/40308 514776 |
publishDate | 2019 |
record_format | openpolar |
spelling | ftbostonuniv:oai:open.bu.edu:2144/40308 2025-04-06T14:56:15+00:00 Are exoplanets orbiting m dwarfs extreme? Muirhead, Philip Reykjavik, Iceland 2019-08-23 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/2144/40308 https://sites.northwestern.edu/iceland2019/ unknown https://sites.northwestern.edu/iceland2019/ Philip Muirhead. 2019. "Are Exoplanets Orbiting M Dwarfs Extreme?." https://hdl.handle.net/2144/40308 514776 Presentation 2019 ftbostonuniv 2025-03-10T04:58:28Z I gave an invited talk at Extreme Solar Systems IV in REYKJAVIK, ICELAND. However, please note that all talks were officially "invited" according to the organizers. M dwarf stars have long spin-down timescales, long activity lifetimes and persistent magnetic activity, all of which have implications for the potential habitability of orbiting planets. I will present results from several research programs investigating M dwarf rotation, activity and evolution. I will discuss a new technique to measure chemical-kinematic ages of main-sequence M dwarf stars. We applied that technique to a variety of nearby M dwarfs, both planet hosts and non-planet hosts, and rapid (young) and slow (old) rotators. We find that relatively slow rotators (P 100 days) do not appear to be α enriched, indicating that they are not over 10 Gyrs old. Second, for the rapid rotators, we see clear evidence of Zeeman enhancement of Y-band Ti I lines as a function of Rossby number. While other activity indicators, such as H-α and X-ray emission, appear to saturate with low Rossby number, Zeeman enhancement does not, indicating that the saturation mechanism is confined to the chromosphere and corona. Finally, I will present new results on the M dwarf radius problem. Using spectral synthesis methods, we find that large magnetic star spot fractions are primarily responsible for observed discrepancies between model and measured stellar radii in fully convective M dwarf stars. As most M dwarfs appear discrepant, our results suggest the vast majority of M dwarfs have large spot fractions and correspondingly high localization of magnetic fields. Published version Conference Object Iceland Boston University: OpenBU |
spellingShingle | Muirhead, Philip Are exoplanets orbiting m dwarfs extreme? |
title | Are exoplanets orbiting m dwarfs extreme? |
title_full | Are exoplanets orbiting m dwarfs extreme? |
title_fullStr | Are exoplanets orbiting m dwarfs extreme? |
title_full_unstemmed | Are exoplanets orbiting m dwarfs extreme? |
title_short | Are exoplanets orbiting m dwarfs extreme? |
title_sort | are exoplanets orbiting m dwarfs extreme? |
url | https://hdl.handle.net/2144/40308 https://sites.northwestern.edu/iceland2019/ |