Trajectories of coronal mass ejection from solar-type stars
Tipo
Artigo
Data de publicação
2023
Periódico
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Citações (Scopus)
3
Autores
Menezes F.
Valio A.
Netto Y.
Araujo A.
Kay C.
Opher M.
Valio A.
Netto Y.
Araujo A.
Kay C.
Opher M.
Orientador
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Título de Volume
Membros da banca
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Resumo
© 2023 The Author(s) Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Royal Astronomical Society.The Sun and other solar-type stars have magnetic fields that permeate their interior and surface, extend through the interplanetary medium, and are the main drivers of stellar activity. Stellar magnetic activity affects the physical processes and conditions of the interplanetary medium and orbiting planets. Coronal mass ejections (CMEs) are the most impactful of these phenomena in near-Earth space weather and consist of plasma clouds with a magnetic field, ejected from the solar corona. Precisely predicting the trajectory of CMEs is crucial in determining whether a CME will hit a planet and impact its magnetosphere and atmosphere. Despite the rapid developments in the search for stellar CMEs, their detection is still very incipient. In this work, we aim to better understand the propagation of CMEs by analysing the influence of initial parameters on CME trajectories, such as position, velocities, and the stellar magnetic field's configuration. We reconstruct magnetograms for Kepler-63 (KIC 11554435) and Kepler-411 (KIC 11551692) from spot transit mapping, and use a CME deflection model, ForeCAT, to simulate trajectories of hypothetical CMEs launched into the interplanetary medium from Kepler-63 and Kepler-411. We apply the same methodology to the Sun, for comparison. Our results show that in general deflections and rotations of CMEs decrease with their radial velocity and increase with ejection latitude. Moreover, magnetic fields stronger than the Sun's, such as Kepler-63's, tend to cause greater CME deflections.
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Assuntos Scopus
Coronal mass ejection , Interplanetary medium , Magnetic-field , Planet-star interactions , Star: activity , Stars: magnetic field , Stars: solar types , Starspots , Sun: coronal mass ejection