Powerful Flare from Star Proxima Centauri
Detected with ALMA
Puts habitability of nearby system into question
Puts habitability of nearby system into question
National Radio Astronomy
Observatory – February 26, 2018 -- Space weather emitted by Proxima Centauri,
the star closest to our sun, may make that system rather inhospitable to life
after all.
Using data from the Atacama Large
Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), a team of astronomers discovered
that a powerful stellar flare erupted from Proxima Centauri last March. This
finding, published in the Astrophysical
Journal Letters, raises questions about the habitability of our solar
system’s nearest exoplanetary neighbor, Proxima b, which orbits Proxima Centauri.
At its peak, the newly
recognized flare was 10 times brighter than our sun’s largest flares, when
observed at similar wavelengths. Stellar flares have not been well studied at
the millimeter and submillimeter wavelengths detected by ALMA , especially around stars of Proxima
Centauri’s type, called M dwarfs, which are the most common in our galaxy.
“March 24, 2017, was no ordinary
day for Proxima Cen,” said Meredith MacGregor, an astronomer at the Carnegie
Institution for Science, Department of Terrestrial Magnetism in Washington , D.C. ,
who led the research with fellow Carnegie astronomer Alycia Weinberger. Along
with colleagues from the Harvard-Smithsonian
Center for Astrophysics, David Wilner
and Adam Kowalski, and Steven Cranmer of the University
of Colorado Boulder — they discovered
the enormous flare when they reanalyzed ALMA
observations taken last year.
The flare increased Proxima
Centauri’s brightness by 1,000 times over 10 seconds. This was preceded by a
smaller flare; taken together, the whole event lasted fewer than two minutes of
the 10 hours that ALMA
observed the star between January and March of last year.
Stellar flares happen when a
shift in the star’s magnetic field accelerates electrons to speeds approaching
that of light. The accelerated electrons interact with the highly charged
plasma that makes up most of the star, causing an eruption that produces
emission across the entire electromagnetic spectrum.
“It’s likely that Proxima b was
blasted by high energy radiation during this flare,” MacGregor explained,
adding that it was already known that Proxima Centauri experienced regular,
although smaller, X-ray flares. “Over the billions of years since Proxima b
formed, flares like this one could have evaporated any atmosphere or ocean and
sterilized the surface, suggesting that habitability may involve more than just
being the right distance from the host star to have liquid water.”
An earlier paper that also used
the same ALMA
data interpreted its average brightness, which included the light output of
both the star and the flare together, as being caused by multiple disks of dust
encircling Proxima Centauri, not unlike our own solar system’s asteroid and
Kuiper belts.
But when MacGregor, Weinberger,
and their team looked at the ALMA
data as a function of observing time, instead of averaging it all together,
they were able to see the transient explosion of radiation emitted from Proxima
Centauri for what it truly was.
“There is now no reason to think
that there is a substantial amount of dust around Proxima Cen,” Weinberger
said. “Nor is there any information yet that indicates the star has a rich
planetary system like ours.”
The National Radio Astronomy
Observatory is a facility of the National Science Foundation operated under
cooperative agreement by Associated Universities, Inc.
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