Title: Summary of Cool Stars 13
1Summary of Cool Stars 13
- Hamburg Germany
- July 5-9, 2004
- Jeffrey L. Linsky
- JILA/University of Colorado
- Boulder Colorado
2Who said this?
- (1) Who is not attending anything?
- (2) You get what scientists call a mess.
- (3) The purpose of a diagnostic tool is not to
verify anything. - (4) Recently the agreement of theory and
observations has gone downhill. - (5) A unique harmonization of data.
- (6) I feel like I should be selling something.
3Who said this ? (continued)
- (7) Of course we need more candidates and more
data. - (8) The synthetic models are wrong. They are
always wrong. - (9) I think that this thing is running out of
battery. - (10) In order to give you the impression that we
have done our job - (11) The next talk will be on the weather in
Hamburg rain and clouds - (12) My sophisticated model a horizontal line
at zero.
4Solar activity and the Earths climate are they
correlated?
- Ulrich Cubasch Recent warming of the Earths
climate (larger than seen in the last 1000 years)
cannot be explained only by solar forcing.
Politically important. - Sami Solanki The Sun has been more active
during the last 60 years than in the previous
1100 years. - Phil Judge If Tau Ceti is a reliable indicator
of solar activity during the Maunder minimum,
then the Sun during MM had some Ca II emission
and thus a magnetic network and probably a
magnetic cycle. Tau Ceti TR lines show no
redshifts (a magnetic effect). - Jason Wright (P) Most or all ? of the
solar-type stars with very low Ca II emission are
evolved subgiants about 1 magnitude above the MS
rather than solar analogs in a Maunder minimum
state.
5How are the coronae of solar-type stars heated?
- Hardi Peter Self-consistent 3D MHD model of a
solar active region with heating due to braiding
of magnetic flux (Parker model) can explain
DEM(T) and Doppler shifts as f(T). These
important results were not explained by previous
1D models. - Karel Schrijver Potential field extrapolations
of solar global magnetic field with different
functional heating laws. Best fit to Yohkoh
images is with a heating law consistent with DC
heating by braided coronal magnetic fields with
reconnection at the Alfven speed (like Peter).
Predicts flux-flux relations for active stars.
Simulations include the essential physics
approximately. - Sam Krucker RHESSI low energy nonthermal spectra
of flares may answer the question of whether
microflares can explain coronal heating. - Massimo Landi (P) None of the commonly used
heating mechanisms reproduce solar X-ray
observations. Loop temperatures and TR emission
lines are best reproduced by loops with small
cross-sectional areas at the base and expand
upwards. Importance of geometry. - Alessandra Telleschi(P) Time scale for change
from hot coronae/IFIP to cool corona/FIP in young
stars. - Giovanni Peres(P) Scaling laws relating T, P,
volumetric heating, and loop lengths. What is
the path from scaling laws to understanding
physical processes in coronae?
6Are the coronae of PMS stars and brown dwarfs
heated in qualitatively different ways than the
Sun?
- Eric Feigelson X-ray saturation observed in the
Orion stars depends on age like other samples of
stars, but the dependence on rotation is
different. Why? Accreting PMS stars show lower
X-ray emission than nonaccreting stars? Why?
7What are the basic properties of stellar coronal
structures? Why are the hottest plasmas dense and
compact?
- Jan-Uwe Ness XMM and Chandra spectra of Fe XXI
and Fe XXII imply different electron densities
than EUVE spectra. We need high S/N and spectral
resolution and better understanding of atomic
physics to make progress. - Paola Testa (P) Ratios of He-like Mg XI lines
indicate high density plasma covering 0.0001 to
0.1 of active stars (flares?), whereas O VII line
ratios indicate cool low density plasma covering
up to 1.0 of active stars. Is this right? - Manuel Guedel (P) XMM-Newton observations of the
eclipsing M dwarf primary CM Dra including
primary and secondary eclipses. Reconstruction of
the coronal structure is crude and not unique
but a powerful technique for the future.
8What are we learning about stellar magnetic
fields?
- Moira Jardine Models that produce mixed magnetic
polarity at the poles of rapid rotator stars
predict enhanced meridional flows. Mixed polarity
at the poles may explain the absence of X-ray
cycles. - Jeff Valenti Measurements of 2-3 kG magnetic
fields in active K dwarfs and PMS stars from the
analysis of near-IR spectra. First measurement of
a uniform magnetic field in the accretion shock
of a PMS star using spectropolarimetry. - Soren Dorch (P) MHD simulations show that M
giants/supergiants like Betelgeuse could have 500
G surface magnetic fields, which could influence
dust and wind formation. - Nils Ryde (P) The 12 micron Mg I line is very
Zeeman sensitive. A good tool for measuring
photospheric magnetic fields with new IR
spectrographs (e.g., TEXES). - Michaelo Weber (P) STELLA will obtain Doppler
images. Important to study diverse stars and
monitor interesting stars.
9What is the physics behind crazy coronal
abundances?
- Marc Audard Important to compare coronal
abundances with measured stellar photospheric
abundances. Abundance changes must occur in the
chromosphere where FIP lt10 eV elements are
ionized, but the physical process not well
understood. - David Garcia-Alvarez Existance of very hot
coronal plasma plays a role in FIP/IFIP perhaps
by chromospheric evaporation or ionization. - Manfred Cuntz(P) The effects of time-dependent
ionization are most pronounced in simulations of
magnetic flux tubes with narrow spreading with
height (high magnetic filling factors). - Jorge Sanz-Forcada(P) For some stars IFIP goes
away when one compares coronal with stellar
photospheric abundances.
10Evidence for and consequences of high energy
particle acceleration
- Sam Krucker RHESSI images show locations of the
thermal and nonthermal components of solar
flares. Detect a plasmoid rising from a
reconnecting loop. Evidence for nonthermal
electrons and protons in similar nearby loops. - Rachel Osten (P) Detected variable 3.6 cm and 6
cm emission from the M8.5 V star TVLM513-46546 at
10.5 pc. Why is there gyrosynchrotron emission
from relativistic electrons from a fully
convective star? Is radio emission from very cool
stars common or not?
11New insights concerning stellar flares
- Marc Audard The Neupert effect is observed
during flares on several stars supports the
chromospheric evaporation scenario. - Jan-Uwe Ness Coronal electron densities decrease
with time during a flare on Proxima Centauri.
12Do A-type stars have chromospheres and coronae?
- Beate Stelzer Adaptive optics, Chandra X-ray
images, and IR spectroscopy still do not rule out
X-ray emission from faint close companions to B
stars. So look for X-ray variability and hard
X-ray spectra from cool companions. - Eric Feigelson Young A and B stars in Orion are
either very weak or dark X-ray sources.
Suggestive of no low mass companions. - Seth Redfield (P) Horned shape of the C III 977A
and O VI 1032A lines of Altair (A7V) provide the
first evidence for limb brightening on stars.
Doppler imaging feasible with FUSE and Con-X. - Christian Schroder (P) There are 73 apparently
single A-type stars in the RASS and pointing
error boxes. Some have Lx values that look to be
too high for late-type companions. - Jurgen Schmitt (P) Some MCP (magnetic
chemically peculiar) stars with spectral types
B2p-A0p are strong X-ray sources. Probably
wind-driven magnetosphere mechanism rather than
coronal sources.
13What are we learning about stellar interior
structure and dynamos?
- Jorgen Christensen-Dalsgaard To get a good match
of observed with predicted frequencies, solar
models must include settling of heavy elements
and relativistic motions of electrons. But the
new lower O/H value by Asplund et al (2004) is
a serious challenge. - John Barnes Differential rotation decreases with
mass until stars rotate as solid bodies at M1-2V.
So, the alpha effect must dominate magnetic field
generation in M dwarfs. - Michael Weber (P) Study of differential rotation
of 5 RS CVn-type giants using time series Doppler
images shows that some stars are solar-like
(equator faster than pole) and some are reversed.
Why? - Wolfgang Dobler Theoretical models for fully
convective stars can and do generate large scale
magnetic fields. So, M dwarfs should have large
scale magnetic loops and very energetic flares.
14Interaction of stars with disks
- Eric Feigelson Deep penetration of hard X-rays
and MeV protons from PMS stellar flares can
change the chemistry, ionization, and turbulence
in disks that can determine whether there are hot
Jupiters or habitable Earths. Important
connection to the rest of astronomy. - Scott Gregory Computed potential field
extrapolations to determine accretion channels
for PMS stars. Compared accretion footpoints to
Zeeman Doppler images of LQ Hya and AB Dor. Now
lets get more realistic about field-disk
interactions. - Ray Jayarardhana Accreting brown dwarfs are slow
rotators, so disk locking scenario applies to
young BDs. - Jochen Eisloffel For VLM stars and BDs disk
locking is probably not a major issue for stellar
rotation.
15New insights concerning the use of coronal
spectral diagnostics
- M. Matranga (P) Evidence for opacity in the Fe
XVII 16.78A and 15.01A lines. If so, then path
length 0.3 Rstar.
16What is Spitzer telling us about PMS stars ?
- John Stauffer Class I objects near the tips of
elephant trunks photodissociation regions, so
that is where star formation occurs. Time scale
for A star debris disk dissipation about 100 Myr.
- Adam Burgasser Spitzer is providing the first
good mid-IR spectra of metal-poor L and T
subdwarfs. No good model atmospheres to fit the
data. - Michael Cushing First detection of 7.8 µ CH4 and
10.5 µ NH3 bands in BDs. - Kevin Luhman Spitzer excellent for discovery of
Class I BDs. First widely-separated BD binary
system provides best evidence yet that BDs formed
by cloud fragmentation rather than by ejection
from a multiple system.
17What is new about brown dwarfs?
- Kelle Cruz The stellar luminosity function turns
up at MJ 14-15 (the stellar-BD boundary) but
Spitzer data are needed to determine the LF
fainter than MJ 16 (L7). - Subhanjoy Mohanty At low masses (0.01 MSun)
stellar radii appear to be too large. So present
evolutionary tracks may be in error due to early
turn on of deuterium burning. - Herve Bouy First dynamical mass for a brown
dwarf. Important test of theoretical models.
18How are stellar winds accelerated?
- Stephen Cranmer Speed, density, and mass flux of
the solar wind depends on the magnetic field
topology (large expansion factor produces slow
wind). Strong departures from Maxwellian implies
wave dissipation important (ion-cyclotron waves
not yet observed). Magnetic field geometry
critically important. - Brian Wood A whole new field of research dwarf
star winds. Apparent decrease in mass loss rates
at log Fxgt6 could be due to a topological change
in coronal magnetic fields to nearly dipolar
(polar spots). Diverse subfields are now
connecting. - Susanne Hoefner Importance of including the
essential microphysics when modeling AGB
atmospheres and winds (frequency-dependent
radiative transfer, time-dependent dust
formation, pulsations, etc.). Much information in
time series. - Cian Crowley Empirical wind velocity laws for
giants in symbiotic binaries from N(HI) vs
phase data are inconsistent with generally used
beta scaling laws. - Klaus-Peter Schroeder (P) New semiempirical mass
loss relation different from the classical
Reimers law. Important for AGB stars. - Alex Lobel Spatially-resolved spectroscopy of
Betelgeuse provides evidence for wind
acceleration in the upper chromosphere.
Coexistence of warm gas and cold dust in the
upper chromosphere may require time-dependent
wind acceleration models.
19Some minor concerns
- .ppt presentors should recognize that Light green
cannot be seen against a bright background on the
screen. - Dark red, blue, and violet are not visible
against a dark background.
20For the future
- Science by simulations is a powerful tool for
identifying the importance of different physical
processes. - Future spectroscopic missions for UV and X-rays
are in the distant future and the reliability of
present analysis tools is uncertain. So, we need
to create a rich data archive (legacy) for future
analysis and reanalysis during the data drought. - New data, especially from new spectral regions,
will rejuvenate the field (Spitzer, ALMA,
ground-based spectroscopy and interferometry,
etc.) - Always emphasize uniqueness.
- Cool stars are kühl because (in various ways)
they provide insights concerning broader issues
in astrophysics.