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Flares hunting in hot subdwarf and white dwarf stars from Cycles 1-5 of TESS photometry

Authors :
Xing, Keyu
Zong, Weikai
Silvotti, Roberto
Fu, Jian-Ning
Charpinet, Stéphane
Cang, Tianqi
Hermes, J. J.
Ma, Xiao-Yu
Wang, Haotian
Wang, Xuan
Wu, Tao
Wang, Jiaxin
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Stellar flares are critical phenomena on stellar surfaces, which are closely tied to stellar magnetism. While extensively studied in main-sequence (MS) stars, their occurrence in evolved compact stars, specifically hot subdwarfs and white dwarfs (WDs), remains scarcely explored. Based on Cycles 1-5 of TESS photometry, we conducted a pioneering survey of flare events in $\sim12,000$ compact stars, corresponding to $\sim38,000$ light curves with 2-minute cadence. Through dedicated techniques for detrending light curves, identifying preliminary flare candidates, and validating them via machine learning, we established a catalog of 1016 flares from 193 compact stars, including 182 from 58 sdB/sdO stars and 834 from 135 WDs, respectively. However, all flaring compact stars showed signs of contamination from nearby objects or companion stars, preventing sole attribution of the detected flares. For WDs, it is highly probable that the flares originated from their cool MS companions. In contrast, the higher luminosities of sdB/sdO stars diminish companion contributions, suggesting that detected flares originated from sdB/sdO stars themselves or through close magnetic interactions with companions. Focusing on a refined sample of 23 flares from 13 sdB/sdO stars, we found their flare frequency distributions were slightly divergent from those of cool MS stars; instead, they resemble those of hot B/A-type MS stars having radiative envelopes. This similarity implies the flares on sdB/sdO stars, if these flares did originate from them, may share underlying mechanisms with hot MS stars, which warrants further investigation.<br />Comment: 25 pages, 11 figures, 5 tables, accepted for publication in ApJS

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2402.16018
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4365/ad2ddd