Theoretical Basal Ca Ii Fluxes for Late-Type Stars: Results From Magnetic Wave Models With Time-Dependent Ionization and Multi-Level Radiation Treatments

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Date

2018

Authors

Fawzy, Diaa E.

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Springer

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Green Open Access

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Abstract

In the current study we present ab initio numerical computations of the generation and propagation of longitudinal waves in magnetic flux tubes embedded in the atmospheres of late-type stars. The interaction between convective turbulence and the magnetic structure is computed and the obtained longitudinal wave energy flux is used in a self-consistent manner to excite the small-scale magnetic flux tubes. In the current study we reduce the number of assumptions made in our previous studies by considering the full magnetic wave energy fluxes and spectra as well as time-dependent ionization (TDI) of hydrogen, employing multi-level Ca II atomic models, and taking into account departures from local thermodynamic equilibrium. Our models employ the recently confirmed value of the mixing-length parameter alpha = 1.8. Regions with strong magnetic fields (magnetic filling factors of up to 50%) are also considered in the current study. The computed Ca II emission fluxes show a strong dependence on the magnetic filling factors, and the effect of time-dependent ionization (TDI) turns out to be very important in the atmospheres of late-type stars heated by acoustic and magnetic waves. The emitted Ca II fluxes with TDI included into the model are decreased by factors that range from 1.4 to 5.5 for GOV and MOV stars, respectively, compared to models that do not consider TDI. The results of our computations are compared with observations. Excellent agreement between the observed and predicted basal flux is obtained. The predicted trend of Ca II emission flux with magnetic filling factor and stellar surface temperature also agrees well with the observations but the calculated maximum fluxes for stars of different spectral types are about two times lower than observations. Though the longitudinal MHD waves considered here are important for chromosphere heating in high activity stars, additional heating mechanism(s) are apparently present.

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Keywords

Numerical, Stars, Chromospheres, Stars: shock waves, Main-Sequence Stars, Solar-Type Stars, Longitudinal Tube Waves, Chromospheric Variations, Convection Simulations, Emission, Rotation, Oscillations, Generation, Atmosphere

Fields of Science

0103 physical sciences, 01 natural sciences

Citation

WoS Q

Q3

Scopus Q

Q3
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OpenCitations Citation Count
2

Source

Astrophysıcs And Space Scıence

Volume

363

Issue

3

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Scopus : 2

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2

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