K2 Ultracool Dwarfs Survey – VI. White light superflares observed on an L5 dwarf and flare rates of L dwarfs

Author/Creator ORCID

Date

2020-05-06

Department

Program

Citation of Original Publication

Paudel, R. R.; Gizis, J. E.; Mullan, D. J.; Schmidt, S. J.; Burgasser, A. J.; Williams, P. K. G.; K2 Ultracool Dwarfs Survey – VI. White light superflares observed on an L5 dwarf and flare rates of L dwarfs; Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 494, Issue 4, June 2020, Pages 5751–5760; https://academic.oup.com/mnras/article-abstract/494/4/5751/5831082?

Rights

This item is likely protected under Title 17 of the U.S. Copyright Law. Unless on a Creative Commons license, for uses protected by Copyright Law, contact the copyright holder or the author.
This article is published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society ©: 2020 The Author(s), Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

Subjects

Abstract

KeplerK2 long cadence data are used to study white light flares in a sample of 45 L dwarfs. We identified 11 flares on 9 L dwarfs with equivalent durations of (1.3–198) h and total (UV/optical/IR) energies of ≥0.9 × 10³² erg. Two superflares with energies of >10³³ erg were detected on an L5 dwarf (VVV BD001): this is the coolest object so far on which flares have been identified. The larger superflare on this L5 dwarf has an energy of 4.6 × 10³⁴ erg and an amplitude of >300 times the photospheric level: so far, this is the largest amplitude flare detected by the Kepler/K2 mission. The next coolest star on which we identified a flare was an L2 dwarf: 2MASS J08585891+1804463. Combining the energies of all the flares which we have identified on 9 L dwarfs with the total observation time which was dedicated by Kepler to all 45 L dwarfs, we construct a composite flare frequency distribution (FFD). The FFD slope is quite shallow (−0.51 ± 0.17), consistent with earlier results reported by Paudel et al. for one particular L0 dwarf, for which the FFD slope was found to be −0.34. Using the composite FFD, we predict that, in early- and mid-L dwarfs, a superflare of energy 10³³ erg occurs every 2.4 yr and a superflare of energy 10³⁴ erg occurs every 7.9 yr. Analysis of our L dwarf flares suggests that magnetic fields of ≥0.13–1.3 kG are present on the stellar surface: such fields could suppress Type II radio bursts.