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Author name code: kowalski
ADS astronomy entries on 2022-09-14
author:"Kowalski, Adam" 

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Title: Development of Integral Field Spectrographs to Revolutionize
    Spectroscopic Observations of Solar Flares and other Energetic
    Solar Eruptions
Authors: Lin, Haosheng; Anan, Tetsu; Cauzzi, Gianna; Fletcher, Lyndsay;
   Huang, Pei; Kowalski, Adam; Kramar, Maxim; Qiu, Jiong; Samra, Jenna;
   Spittler, Constance; Sukegawa, Takashi; Wirth, Gregory
2022arXiv220900788L    Altcode:
  The Sun's proximity offers us a unique opportunity to study in detail
  the physical processes on a star's surface; however, the highly dynamic
  nature of the stellar surface -- in particular, energetic eruptions
  such as flares and coronal mass ejections -- presents tremendous
  observational challenges. Spectroscopy probes the physical state of
  the solar atmosphere, but conventional scanning spectrographs and
  spectrometers are unable to capture the full evolutionary history of
  these dynamic events with a sufficiently wide field of view and high
  spatial, spectral, and temporal resolution. Resolving the physics of the
  dynamic sun requires gathering simultaneous spectra across a contiguous
  area over the full duration of these events, a goal now tantalizingly
  close to achievable with continued investment in developing powerful
  new Integral Field Spectrographs to serve as the foundation of both
  future ground- and space-based missions. This technology promises to
  revolutionize our ability to study solar flares and CMEs, addressing
  NASA's strategic objective to "understand the Sun, solar system, and
  universe." Since such events generate electromagnetic radiation and
  high-energy particles that disrupt terrestrial electric infrastructure,
  this investment not only advances humanity's scientific endeavors
  but also enhances our space weather forecasting capability to protect
  against threats to our technology-reliant civilization.

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Title: Photospheric Spectral Line Velocity Diagnostics in Solar and
    Stellar Flares.
Authors: Monson, Aaron; Milligan, Ryan; Kowalski, Adam; Mathioudakis,
   Mihalis
2022cosp...44.2449M    Altcode:
  We present radiative-hydrodynamic simulations of solar flares generated
  by the RADYN and RH codes to study the perturbations induced in
  photospheric Fe I lines by electron beam heating. We investigate the
  induced line-of-sight velocities by various electron beam parameter
  combinations, and the primary energy transport mechanisms responsible
  for heating the lower solar atmosphere. From these models, we synthesize
  several deep forming Fe I spectral lines and study the Doppler velocity
  information retrievable during the flare. It is shown that throughout
  the period of beam heating a significant proportion of the line
  intensity is contributed from the chromosphere, leading to erroneous
  Doppler shifts not reflective in the photospheric LOS velocities. The
  apparent m/s Doppler shifts can even indicate false downflows in the
  photosphere, making their study vital for correctly considering momentum
  transfer throughout the lower solar atmosphere. We have expanded our
  analysis to stellar flare scenarios, where the sensitivity of these deep
  forming spectral lines provides a powerful diagnostic tool for analysing
  extreme stellar flare effects and features in the chromosphere.

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Title: Coronal Dimming as a Proxy for Solar and Stellar Coronal
    Mass Ejections
Authors: Jin, Meng; Nitta, Nariaki; Derosa, Marc; Cheung, Mark; Osten,
   Rachel; France, Kevin; Mason, James; Kowalski, Adam; Schrijver, Carolus
2022cosp...44.1404J    Altcode:
  Solar coronal dimmings have been observed extensively in the past two
  decades. Due to their close association with coronal mass ejections
  (CMEs), there is a critical need to improve our understanding of the
  physical processes that cause dimmings as well as their relationship
  with CMEs. Recent study (e.g., Veronig et al. 2021) also shows promising
  dimming signals from distant stars, which suggest the possibility of
  using coronal dimming as a proxy to diagnose stellar CMEs. In this
  study, we first conduct a comparative study of solar coronal dimming
  using MHD simulations and SDO observations. A detailed analysis of
  the simulation and observation data reveals how transient dimming
  / brightening are related to plasma heating processes, while the
  long-lasting core and remote dimmings are caused by mass loss process
  induced by the CME. Using metrics such as dimming depth and dimming
  slope, we uncover a relationship between dimmings and CME properties
  (e.g., CME mass, CME speed) in the simulation. We further extend the
  model for simulating the stellar CMEs and dimmings and compare with
  solar cases. Our result suggests that coronal dimmings encode important
  information about the associated CMEs, which provides a physical basis
  for detecting stellar CMEs from distant solar-like stars.

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Title: Blue asymmetries in Balmer lines and possible mass ejections
    during mid M dwarf flares
Authors: Notsu, Yuta; Shibata, Kazunari; Enoto, Teruaki; Hamaguchi,
   Kenji; Honda, Satoshi; Maehara, Hiroyuki; Nogami, Daisaku; Ikuta,
   Kai; Kowalski, Adam; Hawley, Suzanne; Davenport, James; Tristan,
   Isaiah; Namekata, Kosuke
2022cosp...44.1382N    Altcode:
  Flares are releases of magnetic energy in the solar/stellar atmosphere,
  and they have strong emissions from radio to X-rays. During some M
  dwarf flares, chromospheric line profiles show blue asymmetries (Honda
  et al. 2018), although red asymmetries are more commonly observed in
  solar flares. Similar enhancements of the blue wings of Balmer lines
  may provide clues for investigating the early phases of stellar coronal
  mass ejections (CMEs) during flares (cf. Vida et al. 2016&2019), but
  this is still controversial. Thus, we need simultaneous spectroscopic
  and photometric observations of flares with high time resolution
  to understand the relationship between mass ejections and flaring
  events. We have conducted simultaneous spectroscopic and photometric
  observations of mid M dwarf flare stars (YZCMi, EVLac, ADLeo) using
  APO 3.5m/ARCES, SMARTS 1.5m/CHIRON, Nayuta 2m/MALLS (high-dispersion
  spectroscopy), TESS (space high-precision single-color photometry),
  ground-based 0.4-1m telescopes (ground-based photometry), and NICER
  (X-ray spectroscopy). During 34 nights of observations, we detected more
  than 46 flares in Balmer lines (e.g. H$\alpha$). Among them, at least
  8 flare event showed clear blue asymmetries with velocities 100-200
  km s$ ^{-1}$(Maehara et al. 2021 PASJ, Notsu et al. in prep). We
  found various correspondences in the durations of blue asymmetries
  and intensities of white light emissions. In most cases, while the
  blue asymmetries were not significant in the higher-order Balmer lines
  and other chromospheric lines such as the Ca II K/8542A line. As for
  one event, we succeeded in the simultaneous observation of the blue
  asymmetry and X-ray flare for the first time. These results might
  be a clue to investigate the formation processes of the blue-shifted
  components, and discuss how blue asymmteries are helpful for dicussing
  CME properties. By assuming that the blue asymmetries were caused by
  prominence eruptions, we estimate the mass and kinetic energy of the
  upward-moving material to be 10$ ^{15}$ — 10$ ^{18}$ g and 10$ ^{29}$
  —10$ ^{32}$ erg, respectively. The estimated masses are comparable
  to expectations from the empirical relation between the flare X-ray
  energy and mass of upward-moving material for stellar flares and
  solar CMEs. In contrast, the estimated kinetic energies for these
  non-white-light flares are roughly 2-3 orders of magnitude smaller than
  that expected from the relation between flare X-ray energy and kinetic
  energy for solar CMEs. This could be understood by the difference in
  the velocity between CMEs and prominence eruptions.

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Title: Simultaneous Multi-wavelength Study of Flares on nearby active
    star Wolf 359
Authors: Paudel, Rishi; Barclay, Thomas; Schlieder, Joshua; Quintana,
   Elisa; Youngblood, Allison; Gilbert, Emily; Vega, Laura; Osten,
   Rachel; Hamaguchi, Kenji; Monsue, Teresa; Notsu, Yuta; Kowalski,
   Adam; Tristan, Isaiah
2022BAAS...54e.396P    Altcode:
  During a flare, energy is released by a star at wavelengths spanning all
  the way from X-rays to radio. By studying flares with multi-wavelength
  datasets we can understand the correlation between energies and
  different flare properties in various wavelengths. We obtained data
  of nearby active star Wolf 359 using seven different observatories. We
  obtained TESS optical data simultaneous with XMM-Newton X-ray, Swift UV
  and X-ray, NICER X-ray and Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA)
  radio, Las Cumbres Observatory Global Telescope (LCO-GT) near-UV
  and Apache Point Observatory (APO) optical data on Wolf 359. This
  provides an unprecedented number of overlapping measurements/wavelength
  coverage. Such data will be used to study the flare energy partition
  in X-ray/UV/optical/radio wavelength, and to study the full atmospheric
  response to flares, including the action of accelerated particles. Our
  results will be helpful in understanding the space-weather of stars
  with spectral type and age comparable to Wolf 359.

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Title: The Atmospheric Response to High Nonthermal Electron-beam
    Fluxes in Solar Flares. II. Hydrogen-broadening Predictions for
    Solar Flare Observations with the Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope
Authors: Kowalski, Adam F.; Allred, Joel C.; Carlsson, Mats; Kerr,
   Graham S.; Tremblay, Pier-Emmanuel; Namekata, Kosuke; Kuridze, David;
   Uitenbroek, Han
2022ApJ...928..190K    Altcode: 2022arXiv220113349K
  Redshifted components of chromospheric emission lines in the hard X-ray
  impulsive phase of solar flares have recently been studied through
  their 30 s evolution with the high resolution of the Interface Region
  Imaging Spectrograph. Radiative-hydrodynamic flare models show that
  these redshifts are generally reproduced by electron-beam-generated
  chromospheric condensations. The models produce large ambient electron
  densities, and the pressure broadening of the hydrogen Balmer series
  should be readily detected in observations. To accurately interpret
  the upcoming spectral data of flares with the DKIST, we incorporate
  nonideal, nonadiabatic line-broadening profiles of hydrogen into the
  RADYN code. These improvements allow time-dependent predictions for
  the extreme Balmer line wing enhancements in solar flares. We study two
  chromospheric condensation models, which cover a range of electron-beam
  fluxes (1 - 5 × 10<SUP>11</SUP> erg s<SUP>-1</SUP> cm<SUP>-2</SUP>) and
  ambient electron densities (1 - 60 × 10<SUP>13</SUP> cm<SUP>-3</SUP>)
  in the flare chromosphere. Both models produce broadening and
  redshift variations within 10 s of the onset of beam heating. In the
  chromospheric condensations, there is enhanced spectral broadening due
  to large optical depths at Hα, Hβ, and Hγ, while the much lower
  optical depth of the Balmer series H12-H16 provides a translucent
  window into the smaller electron densities in the beam-heated layers
  below the condensation. The wavelength ranges of typical DKIST/ViSP
  spectra of solar flares will be sufficient to test the predictions
  of extreme hydrogen wing broadening and accurately constrain large
  densities in chromospheric condensations.

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Title: High-resolution Near-infrared Spectroscopy of a Flare around
    the Ultracool Dwarf vB 10
Authors: Kanodia, Shubham; Ramsey, Lawrence W.; Maney, Marissa;
   Mahadevan, Suvrath; Cañas, Caleb I.; Ninan, Joe P.; Monson, Andrew;
   Kowalski, Adam F.; Goumas, Maximos C.; Stefansson, Gudmundur;
   Bender, Chad F.; Cochran, William D.; Diddams, Scott A.; Fredrick,
   Connor; Halverson, Samuel; Hearty, Fred; Janowiecki, Steven; Metcalf,
   Andrew J.; Odewahn, Stephen C.; Robertson, Paul; Roy, Arpita; Schwab,
   Christian; Terrien, Ryan C.
2022ApJ...925..155K    Altcode: 2021arXiv211114647K
  We present high-resolution observations of a flaring event in the
  M8 dwarf vB 10 using the near-infrared Habitable-zone Planet Finder
  (HPF) spectrograph on the Hobby-Eberly Telescope. The high stability of
  HPF enables us to accurately subtract a vB 10 quiescent spectrum from
  the flare spectrum to isolate the flare contributions and study the
  changes in the relative energy of the Ca II infrared triplet, several
  Paschen lines, the He λ10830 triplet lines, and to select iron and
  magnesium lines in HPF's bandpass. Our analysis reveals the presence
  of a red asymmetry in the He λ10830 triplet, which is similar to
  signatures of coronal rain in the Sun. Photometry of the flare derived
  from an acquisition camera before spectroscopic observations and the
  ability to extract spectra from up-the-ramp observations with the HPF
  infrared detector enable us to perform time-series analysis of part of
  the flare and provide coarse constraints on the energy and frequency
  of such flares. We compare this flare with historical observations of
  flares around vB 10 and other ultracool M dwarfs and attempt to place
  limits on flare-induced atmospheric mass loss for hypothetical planets
  around vB 10.

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Title: Extreme-ultraviolet Stellar Characterization for Atmospheric
Physics and Evolution mission: motivation and overview
Authors: France, Kevin; Fleming, Brian; Youngblood, Allison; Mason,
   James; Drake, Jeremy J.; Amerstorfer, Ute V.; Barstow, Martin;
   Bourrier, Vincent; Champey, Patrick; Fossati, Luca; Froning, Cynthia
   S.; Green, James C.; Grisé, Fabien; Gronoff, Guillaume; Hellickson,
   Timothy; Jin, Meng; Koskinen, Tommi T.; Kowalski, Adam F.; Kruczek,
   Nicholas; Linsky, Jeffrey L.; Lipscy, Sarah J.; McEntaffer, Randall
   L.; McKenzie, David E.; Miles, Drew M.; Patton, Tom; Savage, Sabrina;
   Siegmund, Oswald; Spittler, Constance; Unruh, Bryce W.; Volz, Máire
2022JATIS...8a4006F    Altcode: 2022arXiv220113219F
  The Extreme-ultraviolet Stellar Characterization for Atmospheric
  Physics and Evolution (ESCAPE) mission is an astrophysics Small
  Explorer employing ultraviolet spectroscopy (EUV: 80 to 825 Å and FUV:
  1280 to 1650 Å) to explore the high-energy radiation environment
  in the habitable zones around nearby stars. ESCAPE provides the
  first comprehensive study of the stellar EUV and coronal mass
  ejection environments that directly impact the habitability of rocky
  exoplanets. In a 20-month science mission, ESCAPE will provide the
  essential stellar characterization to identify exoplanetary systems
  most conducive to habitability and provide a roadmap for NASA's
  future life-finder missions. ESCAPE accomplishes this goal with
  roughly two-order-of-magnitude gains in EUV efficiency over previous
  missions. ESCAPE employs a grazing incidence telescope that feeds an
  EUV and FUV spectrograph. The ESCAPE science instrument builds on
  previous ultraviolet and x-ray instrumentation, grazing incidence
  optical systems, and photon-counting ultraviolet detectors used on
  NASA astrophysics, heliophysics, and planetary science missions. The
  ESCAPE spacecraft bus is the versatile and high-heritage Ball Aerospace
  BCP-Small spacecraft. Data archives will be housed at the Mikulski
  Archive for Space Telescopes.

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Title: Spectral Runway: An Analysis of Solar Balmer Lines through
    both Observations and Models
Authors: Burnham, Emilie; Criscuoli, Serena; Kowalski, Adam; Harder,
   Jerald; Meisner, Randy
2021AGUFMSH45B2367B    Altcode:
  Spectral analysis provides a glimpse into the physical properties of
  stellar atmospheres, which includes temperature, density, magnetic
  signatures, and so on. Balmer lines specifically are used as proxies
  for atmospheric activity, as they have been used to determine stellar
  effective temperatures, and used to constrain stellar atmospheric
  models. Here, we are interested in the variations of Balmer lines
  induced by stellar surface magnetism, which is known to affect the
  atmospheres of orbiting planets and is a factor in determining
  their habitability. As direct solar measurements and spatially
  resolved stellar spectra are not always available, models are vital
  to the understanding of the magnetic contribution to stellar spectral
  variability. In this context, the Sun offers a unique opportunity for
  direct observations of the effects of magnetic features on spectral
  irradiance and further validation with state-of-the-art models. In this
  study we utilize high spatial resolution spectroscopic observations
  obtained at the Dunn Solar Telescope to investigate how surface
  magnetism affects the shape of Balmer line profiles, specifically
  H-alpha and H-gamma. Observational results are then compared with
  theoretical spectra obtained with the Rybiki and Hummer synthesis
  code using two sets of one-dimensional solar atmospheric models (each
  describing different types of quiet and active regions) published
  in Fontenla et al. 1999 and Fontenla et al. 2011, respectively. At
  this point, it seems that the 2011 models are an overall better
  representation of our quiet sun observations than the 1999 models, for
  the 1999 models have far deeper line profiles than would be expected for
  the quiet sun atmospheric structures that were observed. By determining
  the atmospheric models that best fit the observations, our results
  provide important information for improving the understanding of the
  solar atmosphere and for the modeling of stellar spectral variability
  that would, in turn, impact the search for habitable exoplanets.

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Title: Revisting the Orrall-Zirker Effect: Identifying the
    suprathermal proton distribution during solar flares from Lyman
    line emission
Authors: Kerr, Graham; Allred, Joel; Milligan, Ryan; Kowalski, Adam;
   Hudson, Hugh
2021AGUFMSH23B..04K    Altcode:
  It is likely that ions are accelerated during solar flares. However,
  due in large part to a lack of observational constraints on the
  suprathermal ion population in flares, they are not usually considered
  in energy transport models, with the focus being on flare accelerated
  electrons. Gamma-ray observations are required to constrain the high
  energy (MeV) protons, but lower energy (deka-keV to 1 MeV) protons
  can potentially be detected through the Orrall-Zirker effect (Orrall
  &amp; Zirker, 1976). Suprathermal protons undergo charge exchange
  with ambient neutral hydrogen, creating a population of suprathermal
  neutral hydrogen. These energetic neutrals can subsequently emit
  extremely Doppler shifted photons. The appearance of a very broad
  redshifted feature in the far red wings of certain spectral lines
  can indicate the presence of suprathermal ions, and the properties of
  the feature has diagnostic potential of the distribution of those ions
  (e.g. Brosius &amp; Woodgate 1999). This effect is revisited here using
  modern state-of-the-art flare simulations that track the ionisation
  stratification and suprathermal proton distribution as a function of
  time in proton beam driven flares (RADYN+FP, Allred et al 2020), and
  using up-to-date charge exchange cross sections. We have developed a
  post-processing radiation transfer code (OrrallZirkerPy) that takes
  those flare atmospheres as input and makes time-dependent predictions
  of red-shifted features. The characteristics of non-thermal emission
  of Lyman alpha and Lyman beta, and their potential as diagnostics of
  flare accelerated protons, are presented. These predictions are of
  particular interest now that we have current and planned missions that
  can observe these lines during solar flares (e.g. SolO/SPICE, SDO/EVE,
  EUVST, SNIFS).

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Title: Recent observations of stellar flares on G-, K-, and M-dwarf
    stars and possible mass ejections
Authors: Notsu, Yuta; Kowalski, Adam; Maehara, Hiroyuki; Namekata,
   Kosuke; Tristan, Isaiah; Okamoto, Soshi; Ikuta, Kai; Hawley, Suzanne;
   Davenport, James; Enoto, Teruaki; Hamaguchi, Kenji; Nogami, Daisaku;
   Shibata, Kazunari
2021AGUFM.U43B..01N    Altcode:
  Flares are frequent energetic explosions in the stellar atmosphere,
  and are thought to occur by impulsive releases of magnetic energy
  stored around starspots. Large flares (so called superflares) generate
  strong high energy emissions and coronal mass ejections (CMEs), which
  can greatly affect the planetary environment and habitability. Recent
  Kepler/TESS photometric data have revealed the statistical properties
  of superflares on G, K, M-type stars. Superflare stars are well
  characterized by the existence of large starspots on the surface,
  and their magnetic fluxes can explain well superflare energies. Flare
  frequency/energy depends on stellar rotation period and stellar
  temperature. Young rapidly-rotating stars and cooler stars tend to
  have frequent flares, which can be more hazardous for the habitable
  planets. However, we still do not know the emission mechanisms of
  superflares, and how large CMEs are associated with superflares on these
  active stars. Then recently, these active superflare stars have been
  investigated in more detail thorugh recent multi-wavelength surveys. For
  example, Hydrogen chromospheric lines during flares show blue-shifted
  profiles, which can give us some hints on dynamics or mass ejections
  during superflares. In the early part of this invited overview talk,
  I briefly overview the recent statistical results of superflares from
  Kepler/TESS data. Then in the latter part, I also briefly discuss the
  results of recent multi-wavelength campaign observations of superflares,
  and discuss possible detections of mass ejections (stellar CMEs).

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Title: Statistical Analysis of Impulsiveness and Rise Phase Duration
    of Solar Flares in the He II 304 Angstrom Chromospheric Line
Authors: Tamburri, Cole; Kazachenko, Maria; Kowalski, Adam
2021AGUFMSH25E2126T    Altcode:
  We perform statistical analysis of solar flare light curves and ribbon
  morphology to advance our understanding of flare impulsiveness, an
  important parameter to describe stellar flares. The Solar Dynamics
  Observatory Extreme Ultraviolet Variability Experiment (SDO/EVE)
  provides "Sun-as-a-star" data corresponding to the variability of
  the Suns irradiance in the XUV and EUV wavelengths (from 0.1 to 106
  nm). Using EVE light curves in the 304 Angstrom line, we study 2049
  solar flares from 30 April 2010 to 26 May 2014. We present an algorithm
  for fitting the flare light curves in the 304 Angstrom line, emitted by
  He II at around 50000 K from the chromosphere and transition region
  and therefore representative of the dominant source of radiation
  in a solar flare. We use this algorithm to identify particularly
  high signal-to-noise flare light curves within the database, with
  representatives from C, M, and X flare classes. The parameters
  of the model associated with each flare can be used to identify
  notable features such as the incidence of multiple peaks in the rise
  phase. Identification of the rise and decay phases for each flare allows
  us to compare rise phase duration and flare impulsiveness to geometrical
  and physics-based properties of each flare, an important step in
  advancing our understanding of flare energy release. Specifically,
  using SDO Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (SDO/AIA) instrument data in
  the 1600 Angstrom line, we analyze the flare morphology and energy
  release in the context of the "impulsiveness" classification scheme for
  a sub-sample of the flares. We also compare this index to several solar
  flare properties including duration, peak X-ray flux, reconnection rate,
  and quasi-periodic pulsation (QPP) period, among others.

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Title: VizieR Online Data Catalog: IRD and HPF spectra of
    TRAPPIST-1b,e and f (Krishnamurthy+, 2021)
Authors: Krishnamurthy, V.; Hirano, T.; Stefansson, G.; Ninan, J. P.;
   Mahadevan, S.; Gaidos, E.; Kopparapu, R.; Sato, B.; Hori, Y.; Bender,
   C. F.; Canas, C. I.; Diddams, S. A.; Halverson, S.; Harakawa, H.;
   Hawley, S.; Hearty, F.; Hebb, L.; Hodapp, K.; Jacobson, S.; Kanodia,
   S.; Konishi, M.; Kotani, T.; Kowalski, A.; Kudo, T.; Kurokawa,
   T.; Kuzuhara, M.; Lin, A.; Maney, M.; Metcalf, A. J.; Morris, B.;
   Nishikawa, J.; Omiya, M.; Robertson, P.; Roy, A.; Schwab, C.; Serizawa,
   T.; Tamura, M.; Ueda, A.; Vievard, S.; Wisniewski, J.
2021yCat..51620082K    Altcode:
  We observed a photometric transit of TRAPPIST-1b on the night of UT
  2020 September 5 using the Astrophysical Research Consortium Telescope
  Imaging Camera (ARCTIC) on the 3.5m Astrophysical Research Consortium
  Telescope at Apache Point Observatory. We adopted the SDSS filter using
  an exposure time of 18s in the 4x4 binning fast-readout mode. <P />We
  observed the transit of TRAPPIST-1b on the night of UT 2020 September
  17 using Infrared Doppler (IRD), which has a spectral resolution of
  ~70000 in the operating wavelength range of 0.95-1.75μm, mounted on the
  8.2m Subaru Telescope on Maunakea, Hawaii. <P />Habitable Planet Finder
  (HPF) is a fiber-fed high-resolution (R=55000) spectrograph on the 10m
  Hobby-Eberly Telescope (HET) at McDonald Observatory in Texas. Using
  HPF, we obtained three transits on the nights of UT 2018 October 2,
  2019 July 31, and 2020 September 5. <P />(3 data files).

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Title: A Search for Planetary Metastable Helium Absorption in the
    V1298 Tau System
Authors: Vissapragada, Shreyas; Stefánsson, Gudmundur; Greklek-McKeon,
   Michael; Oklopčić, Antonija; Knutson, Heather A.; Ninan, Joe P.;
   Mahadevan, Suvrath; Cañas, Caleb I.; Chachan, Yayaati; Cochran,
   William D.; Collins, Karen A.; Dai, Fei; David, Trevor J.; Halverson,
   Samuel; Hawley, Suzanne L.; Hebb, Leslie; Kanodia, Shubham; Kowalski,
   Adam F.; Livingston, John H.; Maney, Marissa; Metcalf, Andrew J.;
   Morley, Caroline; Ramsey, Lawrence W.; Robertson, Paul; Roy, Arpita;
   Spake, Jessica; Schwab, Christian; Terrien, Ryan C.; Tinyanont,
   Samaporn; Vasisht, Gautam; Wisniewski, John
2021AJ....162..222V    Altcode: 2021arXiv210805358V
  Early in their lives, planets endure extreme amounts of ionizing
  radiation from their host stars. For planets with primordial
  hydrogen and helium-rich envelopes, this can lead to substantial
  mass loss. Direct observations of atmospheric escape in young
  planetary systems can help elucidate this critical stage of planetary
  evolution. In this work, we search for metastable helium absorption-a
  tracer of tenuous gas in escaping atmospheres-during transits of three
  planets orbiting the young solar analog V1298 Tau. We characterize
  the stellar helium line using HET/HPF, and find that it evolves
  substantially on timescales of days to months. The line is stable
  on hour-long timescales except for one set of spectra taken during
  the decay phase of a stellar flare, where absoprtion increased with
  time. Utilizing a beam-shaping diffuser and a narrowband filter
  centered on the helium feature, we observe four transits with
  Palomar/WIRC: two partial transits of planet d (P = 12.4 days), one
  partial transit of planet b (P = 24.1 days), and one full transit of
  planet c (P = 8.2 days). We do not detect the transit of planet c,
  and we find no evidence of excess absorption for planet b, with ΔR
  <SUB>b</SUB>/R <SUB>⋆</SUB> &lt; 0.019 in our bandpass. We find
  a tentative absorption signal for planet d with ΔR <SUB>d</SUB>/R
  <SUB>⋆</SUB> = 0.0205 ± 0.054, but the best-fit model requires a
  substantial (-100 ± 14 minutes) transit-timing offset on a two-month
  timescale. Nevertheless, our data suggest that V1298 Tau d may have
  a high present-day mass-loss rate, making it a priority target for
  follow-up observations.

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Title: High-frequency Wave Power Observed in the Solar Chromosphere
    with IBIS and ALMA
Authors: Molnar, Momchil E.; Reardon, Kevin P.; Cranmer, Steven R.;
   Kowalski, Adam F.; Chai, Yi; Gary, Dale
2021ApJ...920..125M    Altcode: 2021arXiv210708952M
  We present observational constraints on the chromospheric heating
  contribution from acoustic waves with frequencies between 5 and 50
  mHz. We use observations from the Dunn Solar Telescope in New Mexico,
  complemented with observations from the Atacama Large Millimeter Array
  collected on 2017 April 23. The properties of the power spectra of the
  various quantities are derived from the spectral lines of Ca II 854.2
  nm, H I 656.3 nm, and the millimeter continuum at 1.25 and 3 mm. At
  the observed frequencies, the diagnostics almost all show a power-law
  behavior, whose particulars (slope, peak, and white-noise floors)
  are correlated with the type of solar feature (internetwork, network,
  and plage). In order to disentangle the vertical versus transverse
  Alfvénic plasma motions, we examine two different fields of view: one
  near disk center, and the other close to the limb. To infer the acoustic
  flux in the middle chromosphere, we compare our observations with
  synthetic observables from the time-dependent radiative hydrodynamic
  RADYN code. Our findings show that acoustic waves carry up to about
  1 kW m<SUP>-2</SUP> of energy flux in the middle chromosphere, which
  is not enough to maintain the quiet chromosphere. This is in contrast
  to previous publications.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Nondetection of Helium in the Upper Atmospheres of TRAPPIST-1b,
    e, and f
Authors: Krishnamurthy, Vigneshwaran; Hirano, Teruyuki; Stefánsson,
   Gumundur; Ninan, Joe P.; Mahadevan, Suvrath; Gaidos, Eric; Kopparapu,
   Ravi; Sato, Bunei; Hori, Yasunori; Bender, Chad F.; Cañas, Caleb
   I.; Diddams, Scott A.; Halverson, Samuel; Harakawa, Hiroki; Hawley,
   Suzanne; Hearty, Fred; Hebb, Leslie; Hodapp, Klaus; Jacobson, Shane;
   Kanodia, Shubham; Konishi, Mihoko; Kotani, Takayuki; Kowalski, Adam;
   Kudo, Tomoyuki; Kurokawa, Takashi; Kuzuhara, Masayuki; Lin, Andrea;
   Maney, Marissa; Metcalf, Andrew J.; Morris, Brett; Nishikawa, Jun;
   Omiya, Masashi; Robertson, Paul; Roy, Arpita; Schwab, Christian;
   Serizawa, Takuma; Tamura, Motohide; Ueda, Akitoshi; Vievard,
   Sébastien; Wisniewski, John
2021AJ....162...82K    Altcode: 2021arXiv210611444K
  We obtained high-resolution spectra of the ultracool M-dwarf TRAPPIST-1
  during the transit of its planet "b" using two high-dispersion
  near-infrared spectrographs, the Infrared Doppler (IRD) instrument on
  the Subaru 8.2m telescope, and the Habitable Zone Planet Finder (HPF)
  instrument on the 10 m Hobby-Eberly Telescope. These spectroscopic
  observations are complemented by a photometric transit observation
  for planet "b" using the APO/ARCTIC, which assisted us in capturing
  the correct transit times for our transit spectroscopy. Using the
  data obtained by the new IRD and HPF observations, as well as the
  prior transit observations of planets "b," "e" and "f" from IRD,
  we attempt to constrain the atmospheric escape of the planet using
  the He I triplet 10830 Å absorption line. We do not detect evidence
  for any primordial extended H-He atmospheres in all three planets. To
  limit any planet-related absorption, we place an upper limit on the
  equivalent widths of &lt;7.754 mÅ for planet "b," &lt;10.458 mÅ for
  planet "e," &lt;4.143 mÅ for planet "f" at 95% confidence from the
  IRD data, and &lt;3.467 mÅ for planet "b" at 95% confidence from HPF
  data. Using these limits along with a solar-like composition isothermal
  Parker wind model, we attempt to constrain the mass-loss rates for the
  three planets. For TRAPPIST-1b, our models exclude the highest possible
  energy-limited rate for a wind temperature &lt;5000 K. This nondetection
  of extended atmospheres with low mean-molecular weights in all three
  planets aids in further constraining their atmospheric composition by
  steering the focus toward the search of high-molecular-weight species
  in their atmospheres. <SUP>*</SUP>Based on data collected at Subaru
  Telescope, operated by the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan,
  Hobby-Eberly Telescope operated by The University of Texas McDonald
  Observatory, and ARC 3.5m Telescope at Apache Point Observatory.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The ESCAPE mission overview: exploring the stellar drivers
    of exoplanet habitability
Authors: France, Kevin; Fleming, Brian; Youngblood, Allison; Mason,
   James; Drake, Jeremy J.; Amerstorfer, Ute; Barstow, Martin; Bourrier,
   Vincent; Champey, Patrick; Fossati, Luca; Froning, Cynthia; Green,
   James C.; Grisé, Fabien; Gronoff, Guillaume; Hellickson, Timothy;
   Jin, Meng; Koskinen, Tommi T.; Kowalski, Adam F.; Kruczek, Nicholas;
   Linsky, Jeffrey L.; Lipscy, Sarah J.; McEntaffer, Randall L.; Miles,
   Drew M.; Patton, Tom; Savage, Sabrina L.; Siegmund, Oswald; Spittler,
   Constance; Unruh, Bryce; Volz, Márie
2021SPIE11821E..03F    Altcode:
  The Extreme-ultraviolet Stellar Characterization for Atmospheric
  Physics and Evolution (ESCAPE) mission is an astrophysics Small
  Explorer employing ultraviolet spectroscopy (EUV: 80 - 825 Å and FUV:
  1280 - 1650 Å) to explore the high-energy radiation environment in
  the habitable zones around nearby stars. ESCAPE provides the first
  comprehensive study of the stellar EUV and coronal mass ejection
  environments which directly impact the habitability of rocky
  exoplanets. In a 20 month science mission, ESCAPE will provide the
  essential stellar characterization to identify exoplanetary systems
  most conducive to habitability and provide a roadmap for NASA's
  future life-finder missions. ESCAPE accomplishes this goal with
  roughly two-order-of-magnitude gains in EUV efficiency over previous
  missions. ESCAPE employs a grazing incidence telescope that feeds an
  EUV and FUV spectrograph. The ESCAPE science instrument builds on
  previous ultraviolet and X-ray instrumentation, grazing incidence
  optical systems, and photon-counting ultraviolet detectors used on
  NASA astrophysics, heliophysics, and planetary science missions. The
  ESCAPE spacecraft bus is the versatile and high-heritage Ball Aerospace
  BCP-Small spacecraft. Data archives will be housed at the Mikulski
  Archive for Space Telescopes (MAST). ESCAPE is currently completing
  a NASA Phase A study, and if selected for Phase B development would
  launch in 2025.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Time-resolved spectroscopy and photometry of an M dwarf flare
star YZ Canis Minoris with OISTER and TESS: Blue asymmetry in H-alpha
    line during the non-white light flare
Authors: Maehara, Hiroyuki; Notsu, Yuta; Namekata, Kousuke; Honda,
   Satoshi; Kowalski, Adam F.; Katoh, Noriyuki; Ohshima, Tomohito; Iida,
   Kota; Oeda, Motoki; Murata, Katsuhiro L.; Yamanaka, Masayuki; Takagi,
   Kengo; Sasada, Mahito; Akitaya, Hiroshi; Ikuta, Kai; Okamoto, Soshi;
   Nogami, Daisaku; Shibata, Kazunari
2021tsc2.confE..16M    Altcode:
  We report the results from spectroscopic and photometric observations
  of the M-type flare star YZ CMi in the framework of the Optical and
  Infrared Synergetic Telescopes for Education and Research (OISTER)
  collaborations during the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS)
  observation period. We detected 4 H-alpha flares and one of them did
  not show clear brightening in the continuum; during this flare, the
  H-alpha line exhibited blue-asymmetry which has lasted for (\sim 60)
  min. The line of sight velocity of the blue-shifted component is (\sim
  -80) km/s. Under the assumption of that observed blue-asymmetry in
  H-alpha line was caused by a prominence eruption, the mass and kinetic
  energy of the upward-moving material are estimated to be (10^{16}) -
  (10^{18}) g and (10^{29.5}) - (10^{31.5}) erg, respectively. Although
  the estimated mass is comparable to expectations from the empirical
  relation between the X-ray flare energy and mass of solar coronal mass
  ejections (CMEs), the estimated kinetic energy is roughly 2 orders
  of magnitude smaller than that expected from the relation for solar
  CMEs. This discrepancy could be understood by the difference in the
  velocity between CMEs and prominence eruptions (Maehara et al. 2021
  PASJ, 73, 44).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Blue asymmetries in Balmer lines during mid M dwarf flares
Authors: Notsu, Yuta; Kowalski, Adam F.; Maehara, Hiroyuki; Namekata,
   Kosuke; Honda, Satoshi; Enoto, Teruaki; Hamaguchi, Kenji; Tristan,
   Isaiah; Hawley, Suzanne L.; Davenport, James R. A.; Okamoto, Soshi;
   Ikuta, Kai; Nogami, Daisaku; Shibata, Kazunari
2021tsc2.confE.118N    Altcode:
  Flares are releases of magnetic energy in the stellar atmosphere, and
  they have strong emissions from radio to X-rays. During some M dwarf
  flares, chromospheric line profiles show blue asymmetries, although
  red asymmetries are more commonly observed in solar flares. Similar
  enhancements of the blue wings of Balmer lines may provide clues for
  investigating the early phases of stellar coronal mass ejections (CMEs),
  but this is still controversial. Thus, we need more observations to
  understand the relationship between mass ejections and flares. We have
  conducted simultaneous spectroscopic and photometric observations of
  mid M dwarf flare stars using APO 3.5m/ARCES, SMARTS1.5m/CHIRON, TESS,
  and etc. During 34 night observations, we detected 48 flares in Balmer
  lines (e.g. Hα). At least 7 flares show clear blue asymmetries. Blue
  asymmetry durations are different among the 7 events (20min ~
  2hr). These results suggest upward flows of chromospheric plasma during
  flare events. By assuming that the blue asymmetries were caused by
  prominence eruptions, we estimated the mass and kinetic energy. The
  estimated masses are comparable to expectations from the empirical
  relation between the flare X-ray energy and mass of solar CMEs.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Spectroscopic Study Of Wave Propagation In The Quiet Solar
    Chromosphere with IRIS and IBIS
Authors: Molnar, M. E.; Cranmer, S. R.; Reardon, K. P.; Kowalski, A. F.
2021AAS...23811303M    Altcode:
  In this work, we present constraints on the longitudinal (compressive)
  and transverse (Alfvenic) wave velocity perturbations observed in the
  chromosphere. Better knowledge of the power in these different wave
  modes in different regions of the atmosphere are important inputs into
  models for the heating of the solar corona. By using observations
  at multiple viewing angles (distances from the disc center), the
  relative importance of these two components can be evaluated and
  the power in the local acoustic flux can be explored. This work is
  based on Doppler velocity measurements from IRIS of the ultraviolet
  Mg II h &amp; k and the Mn I 280.19 nm lines. These are compared with
  co-temporal observations from IBIS of the H-alpha and Ca II 854.2 nm
  chromospheric lines in the visible. The observed phase differences
  between the velocity diagnostics in these different lines allows us to
  estimate a formation height of the Mn I 280.19 nm line and compare it
  with recent results from simulations. We can also measure the lowest
  observed frequency at which the phase differences indicate the presence
  of wave propagation in order to calculate the local acoustic-wave
  cutoff. We calculate the coherency of the signals and their phases with
  a cross-wavelet analysis. We further combine the IRIS observations
  with 1D simulations of the lower solar atmosphere from the RADYN
  code to estimate the wave flux inthe upper chromosphere. This study
  provides heating constraints for the middle and upper chromospheres and
  additional estimates of the transverse wave power in the chromosphere
  extending previous work by Molnar et al. (2021).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A Multiwavelength Exploration Of Galex And Kepler Flares
Authors: Brasseur, C.; Osten, R.; Tristan, I.; Kowalski, A.
2021AAS...23820802B    Altcode:
  Flares are the most dramatic energy release events that cool stars
  will experience while on the main sequence. A result of magnetic
  reconnection events, they are found on all solar-like stars to varying
  degrees. I will present the results of our multiwavelength study
  of flares found in data from the GALEX (NUV) and Kepler (optical)
  missions. Multi-wavelength measurements enable estimation of the flare
  increase at NUV wavelengths for flares without NUV measurements and
  vice versa. I discuss our exploration of flare rates for the same
  body of stars when observed in the optical vs NUV wavebands, and
  our search for Kepler counterparts to the GALEX flares described in
  Brasseur et al. 2019. I will present our evidence of excess emission
  in the UV, the limitations we have been able to place on flare energy
  fractionation between optical and UV, and possible physical mechanisms
  behind these results.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Impulsiveness Classification Scheme for Solar Flare Light
    Curves in the He II 304 Å Chromospheric Line
Authors: Tamburri, C.; Kazachenko, M.; Kowalski, A.
2021AAS...23812714T    Altcode:
  The Solar Dynamics Observatory Extreme Ultraviolet Variability
  Experiment (SDO/EVE) provides "Sun-as-a-star" data corresponding to
  the variability of the Sun's irradiance in the XUV and EUV wavelengths
  (from 0.1 to 106 nm). Using EVE light curves in the 304 Angstrom line,
  we study 2049 solar flares from 2010 April 30 to 2014 May 26. We present
  an algorithm for fitting the flare light curves in the 304 Angstrom
  line, emitted by He II at around 50000 K from the chromosphere and
  transition region and therefore representative of the dominant source
  of radiation in a solar flare. We use this algorithm to identify
  particularly high signal-to-noise flare light curves within the
  database, with representatives from C, M, and X flare classes. The
  parameters of the model associated with each flare can be used to
  identify features such as secondary peaks in the decay phase. In
  addition, we devise a morphological classification scheme based on
  flare "impulsiveness" and apply the scheme to a sub-sample of the
  flares. While a similar method has been used in the past to classify
  stellar flares, it has yet to be extensively applied to solar flare
  light curves. Morphological variations in flare development and their
  relationship to impulsiveness are studied using SDO Atmospheric Imaging
  Assembly (AIA) instrument data in the 1600 Angstrom line. A comparison
  is made to several solar flare properties including duration, peak X-ray
  flux, and quasi-periodic pulsation (QPP) period, among others. Using
  the modeling algorithm and impulsiveness classification scheme in the
  chromospheric 304 Angstrom line, it may be possible to identify and
  study solar and stellar flare features not revealed by traditional
  methods, particularly when Sun-as-a-star light curves are studied
  together with full-disk images.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A New View of the Solar Interface Region from the Interface
    Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS)
Authors: De Pontieu, Bart; Polito, Vanessa; Hansteen, Viggo; Testa,
   Paola; Reeves, Katharine K.; Antolin, Patrick; Nóbrega-Siverio,
   Daniel Elias; Kowalski, Adam F.; Martinez-Sykora, Juan; Carlsson,
   Mats; McIntosh, Scott W.; Liu, Wei; Daw, Adrian; Kankelborg, Charles C.
2021SoPh..296...84D    Altcode: 2021arXiv210316109D
  The Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS) has been obtaining
  near- and far-ultraviolet images and spectra of the solar atmosphere
  since July 2013. IRIS is the highest resolution observatory to provide
  seamless coverage of spectra and images from the photosphere into the
  low corona. The unique combination of near- and far-ultraviolet spectra
  and images at sub-arcsecond resolution and high cadence allows the
  tracing of mass and energy through the critical interface between the
  surface and the corona or solar wind. IRIS has enabled research into the
  fundamental physical processes thought to play a role in the low solar
  atmosphere such as ion-neutral interactions, magnetic reconnection, the
  generation, propagation, and dissipation of waves, the acceleration of
  non-thermal particles, and various small-scale instabilities. IRIS has
  provided insights into a wide range of phenomena including the discovery
  of non-thermal particles in coronal nano-flares, the formation and
  impact of spicules and other jets, resonant absorption and dissipation
  of Alfvénic waves, energy release and jet-like dynamics associated
  with braiding of magnetic-field lines, the role of turbulence and the
  tearing-mode instability in reconnection, the contribution of waves,
  turbulence, and non-thermal particles in the energy deposition during
  flares and smaller-scale events such as UV bursts, and the role of flux
  ropes and various other mechanisms in triggering and driving CMEs. IRIS
  observations have also been used to elucidate the physical mechanisms
  driving the solar irradiance that impacts Earth's upper atmosphere,
  and the connections between solar and stellar physics. Advances in
  numerical modeling, inversion codes, and machine-learning techniques
  have played a key role. With the advent of exciting new instrumentation
  both on the ground, e.g. the Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope (DKIST)
  and the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), and
  space-based, e.g. the Parker Solar Probe and the Solar Orbiter, we aim
  to review new insights based on IRIS observations or related modeling,
  and highlight some of the outstanding challenges.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Reconstructing the Extreme Ultraviolet Emission of Cool Dwarfs
    Using Differential Emission Measure Polynomials
Authors: Duvvuri, Girish M.; Sebastian Pineda, J.; Berta-Thompson,
   Zachory K.; Brown, Alexander; France, Kevin; Kowalski, Adam F.;
   Redfield, Seth; Tilipman, Dennis; Vieytes, Mariela C.; Wilson, David
   J.; Youngblood, Allison; Froning, Cynthia S.; Linsky, Jeffrey; Parke
   Loyd, R. O.; Mauas, Pablo; Miguel, Yamila; Newton, Elisabeth R.;
   Rugheimer, Sarah; Christian Schneider, P.
2021ApJ...913...40D    Altcode: 2021arXiv210208493D
  Characterizing the atmospheres of planets orbiting M dwarfs requires
  understanding the spectral energy distributions of M dwarfs over
  planetary lifetimes. Surveys like MUSCLES, HAZMAT, and FUMES have
  collected multiwavelength spectra across the spectral type's range
  of T<SUB>eff</SUB> and activity, but the extreme ultraviolet (EUV,
  100-912 Å) flux of most of these stars remains unobserved because
  of obscuration by the interstellar medium compounded with limited
  detector sensitivity. While targets with observable EUV flux exist,
  there is no currently operational facility observing between 150 and 912
  Å. Inferring the spectra of exoplanet hosts in this regime is critical
  to studying the evolution of planetary atmospheres because the EUV
  heats the top of the thermosphere and drives atmospheric escape. This
  paper presents our implementation of the differential emission measure
  technique to reconstruct the EUV spectra of cool dwarfs. We characterize
  our method's accuracy and precision by applying it to the Sun and AU
  Mic. We then apply it to three fainter M dwarfs: GJ 832, Barnard's star,
  and TRAPPIST-1. We demonstrate that with the strongest far-ultraviolet
  (FUV, 912-1700 Å) emission lines, observed with the Hubble Space
  Telescope and/or Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer, and a coarse
  X-ray spectrum from either the Chandra X-ray Observatory or XMM-Newton,
  we can reconstruct the Sun's EUV spectrum to within a factor of 1.8,
  with our model's formal uncertainties encompassing the data. We report
  the integrated EUV flux of our M dwarf sample with uncertainties of
  a factor of 2-7 depending on available data quality.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Critical Science Plan for the Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope
    (DKIST)
Authors: Rast, Mark P.; Bello González, Nazaret; Bellot Rubio,
   Luis; Cao, Wenda; Cauzzi, Gianna; Deluca, Edward; de Pontieu, Bart;
   Fletcher, Lyndsay; Gibson, Sarah E.; Judge, Philip G.; Katsukawa,
   Yukio; Kazachenko, Maria D.; Khomenko, Elena; Landi, Enrico; Martínez
   Pillet, Valentín; Petrie, Gordon J. D.; Qiu, Jiong; Rachmeler,
   Laurel A.; Rempel, Matthias; Schmidt, Wolfgang; Scullion, Eamon; Sun,
   Xudong; Welsch, Brian T.; Andretta, Vincenzo; Antolin, Patrick; Ayres,
   Thomas R.; Balasubramaniam, K. S.; Ballai, Istvan; Berger, Thomas E.;
   Bradshaw, Stephen J.; Campbell, Ryan J.; Carlsson, Mats; Casini,
   Roberto; Centeno, Rebecca; Cranmer, Steven R.; Criscuoli, Serena;
   Deforest, Craig; Deng, Yuanyong; Erdélyi, Robertus; Fedun, Viktor;
   Fischer, Catherine E.; González Manrique, Sergio J.; Hahn, Michael;
   Harra, Louise; Henriques, Vasco M. J.; Hurlburt, Neal E.; Jaeggli,
   Sarah; Jafarzadeh, Shahin; Jain, Rekha; Jefferies, Stuart M.; Keys,
   Peter H.; Kowalski, Adam F.; Kuckein, Christoph; Kuhn, Jeffrey R.;
   Kuridze, David; Liu, Jiajia; Liu, Wei; Longcope, Dana; Mathioudakis,
   Mihalis; McAteer, R. T. James; McIntosh, Scott W.; McKenzie, David
   E.; Miralles, Mari Paz; Morton, Richard J.; Muglach, Karin; Nelson,
   Chris J.; Panesar, Navdeep K.; Parenti, Susanna; Parnell, Clare E.;
   Poduval, Bala; Reardon, Kevin P.; Reep, Jeffrey W.; Schad, Thomas A.;
   Schmit, Donald; Sharma, Rahul; Socas-Navarro, Hector; Srivastava,
   Abhishek K.; Sterling, Alphonse C.; Suematsu, Yoshinori; Tarr, Lucas
   A.; Tiwari, Sanjiv; Tritschler, Alexandra; Verth, Gary; Vourlidas,
   Angelos; Wang, Haimin; Wang, Yi-Ming; NSO and DKIST Project; DKIST
   Instrument Scientists; DKIST Science Working Group; DKIST Critical
   Science Plan Community
2021SoPh..296...70R    Altcode: 2020arXiv200808203R
  The National Science Foundation's Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope
  (DKIST) will revolutionize our ability to measure, understand,
  and model the basic physical processes that control the structure
  and dynamics of the Sun and its atmosphere. The first-light DKIST
  images, released publicly on 29 January 2020, only hint at the
  extraordinary capabilities that will accompany full commissioning of
  the five facility instruments. With this Critical Science Plan (CSP)
  we attempt to anticipate some of what those capabilities will enable,
  providing a snapshot of some of the scientific pursuits that the DKIST
  hopes to engage as start-of-operations nears. The work builds on the
  combined contributions of the DKIST Science Working Group (SWG) and
  CSP Community members, who generously shared their experiences, plans,
  knowledge, and dreams. Discussion is primarily focused on those issues
  to which DKIST will uniquely contribute.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Mega-MUSCLES Spectral Energy Distribution of TRAPPIST-1
Authors: Wilson, David J.; Froning, Cynthia S.; Duvvuri, Girish
   M.; France, Kevin; Youngblood, Allison; Schneider, P. Christian;
   Berta-Thompson, Zachory; Brown, Alexander; Buccino, Andrea P.; Hawley,
   Suzanne; Irwin, Jonathan; Kaltenegger, Lisa; Kowalski, Adam; Linsky,
   Jeffrey; Parke Loyd, R. O.; Miguel, Yamila; Pineda, J. Sebastian;
   Redfield, Seth; Roberge, Aki; Rugheimer, Sarah; Tian, Feng; Vieytes,
   Mariela
2021ApJ...911...18W    Altcode: 2021arXiv210211415W
  We present a 5 Å-100 μm spectral energy distribution (SED)
  of the ultracool dwarf star TRAPPIST-1, obtained as part of
  the Mega-MUSCLES Treasury Survey. The SED combines ultraviolet
  and blue-optical spectroscopy obtained with the Hubble Space
  Telescope, X-ray spectroscopy obtained with XMM-Newton, and models
  of the stellar photosphere, chromosphere, transition region, and
  corona. A new differential emission measure model of the unobserved
  extreme-ultraviolet spectrum is provided, improving on the Lyα-EUV
  relations often used to estimate the 100-911 Å flux from low-mass
  stars. We describe the observations and models used, as well as the
  recipe for combining them into an SED. We also provide a semiempirical,
  noise-free model of the stellar ultraviolet spectrum based on our
  observations for use in atmospheric modeling of the TRAPPIST-1 planets.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Erratum: Optical and X-ray observations of stellar flares
    on an active M dwarf AD Leonis with Seimei Telescope, SCAT, NICER,
    and OISTER
Authors: Namekata, Kosuke; Maehara, Hiroyuki; Sasaki, Ryo; Kawai,
   Hiroki; Notsu, Yuta; Kowalski, Adam F.; Allred, Joel C.; Iwakiri,
   Wataru; Tsuboi, Yoko; Murata, Katsuhiro L.; Niwano, Masafumi;
   Shiraishi, Kazuki; Adachi, Ryo; Iida, Kota; Oeda, Motoki; Honda,
   Satoshi; Tozuka, Miyako; Katoh, Noriyuki; Onozato, Hiroki; Okamoto,
   Soshi; Isogai, Keisuke; Kimura, Mariko; Kojiguchi, Naoto; Wakamatsu,
   Yasuyuki; Tampo, Yusuke; Nogami, Daisaku; Shibata, Kazunari
2021PASJ...73..485N    Altcode: 2021PASJ..tmp...16N
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Discovery of an Extremely Short Duration Flare from Proxima
    Centauri Using Millimeter through Far-ultraviolet Observations
Authors: MacGregor, Meredith A.; Weinberger, Alycia J.; Loyd,
   R. O. Parke; Shkolnik, Evgenya; Barclay, Thomas; Howard, Ward S.;
   Zic, Andrew; Osten, Rachel A.; Cranmer, Steven R.; Kowalski, Adam
   F.; Lenc, Emil; Youngblood, Allison; Estes, Anna; Wilner, David J.;
   Forbrich, Jan; Hughes, Anna; Law, Nicholas M.; Murphy, Tara; Boley,
   Aaron; Matthews, Jaymie
2021ApJ...911L..25M    Altcode: 2021arXiv210409519M
  We present the discovery of an extreme flaring event from Proxima
  Cen by the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP),
  Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), Hubble Space
  Telescope (HST), Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS), and
  the du Pont Telescope that occurred on 2019 May 1. In the millimeter
  and FUV, this flare is the brightest ever detected, brightening
  by a factor of &gt;1000 and &gt;14,000 as seen by ALMA and HST,
  respectively. The millimeter and FUV continuum emission trace each
  other closely during the flare, suggesting that millimeter emission
  could serve as a proxy for FUV emission from stellar flares and become
  a powerful new tool to constrain the high-energy radiation environment
  of exoplanets. Surprisingly, optical emission associated with the event
  peaks at a much lower level with a time delay. The initial burst has
  an extremely short duration, lasting for &lt;10 s. Taken together with
  the growing sample of millimeter M dwarf flares, this event suggests
  that millimeter emission is actually common during stellar flares and
  often originates from short burst-like events.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Discovery of an Extremely Short Duration 'Building Block'
    Flare from Proxima Centauri
Authors: MacGregor, M.; Weinberger, A.; Loyd, P.; Shkolnik, E.;
   Barclay, T.; Howard, W.; Zic, A.; Osten, R.; Cranmer, S.; Kowalski,
   A.; Lenc, E.; Youngblood, A.; Estes, A.; Wilner, D.; Forbrich, J.;
   Hughes, A.; Law, N.; Murphy, T.; Boley, A.; Matthews, J.
2021BAAS...53c1249M    Altcode:
  At a distance of only 1.3 pc, Proxima Cen is the closest exoplanetary
  system orbiting an M-type flare star, making it a benchmark case to
  explore the properties and potential effects of stellar activity on
  exoplanet atmospheres. Here, we present the discovery of an extreme
  flaring event from Proxima Cen by the the Australian Square Kilometre
  Array Pathfinder (ASKAP), the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter
  Array (ALMA), the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS), the
  du Pont telescope at Las Campanas, and the Hubble Space Telescope
  (HST). In the millimeter and FUV, this flare is the brightest ever
  detected, brightening by a factor of &gt;1000 and &gt;14000 as seen by
  ALMA and HST, respectively. The millimeter and FUV continuum emission
  trace each other closely during the flare, suggesting that millimeter
  emission could serve as a proxy for FUV emission from stellar flares
  and become a powerful new tool to constrain the high-energy radiation
  environment of exoplanets. Optical emission is decoupled, peaking at
  a much lower level with a time delay. The extremely short duration
  of this event indicates that it could originate from a single flare
  loop or 'building block.' These are the first results from a larger
  campaign executed in April-July 2019 consisting of roughly 40 hours
  of simultaneous observations of Proxima Cen spanning radio to X-ray
  wavelengths.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Blue asymmetries in Balmer lines during mid M dwarf flares
Authors: Notsu, Yuta; Kowalski, Adam F.; Maehara, Hiroyuki; Namekata,
   Kosuke; Honda, Satoshi; Enoto, Teruaki; Hamaguchi, Kenji; Tristan,
   Isaiah; Hawley, Suzanne L.; Davenport, James R. A.; Okamoto, Soshi;
   Ikuta, Kai; Nogami, Daisaku; Shibata, Kazunari
2021csss.confE.103N    Altcode:
  Flares are releases of magnetic energy in the solar/stellar atmosphere,
  and they have strong emissions from radio to X-rays. During some
  M dwarf flares, chromospheric line profiles show blue asymmetries
  (Eason et al. 1992; Honda et al. 2018), although red asymmetries are
  more commonly observed in solar flares. Similar enhancements of the
  blue wings of Balmer lines may provide clues for investigating the
  early phases of stellar coronal mass ejections (CMEs) during flares
  (cf. Vida et al. 2016&amp;2019), but this is still controversial. Thus,
  we need more flare spectroscopic observations with high time resolution
  to understand the relationship between mass ejections and flaring
  events. The latter is helpful for estimating the impact on planets
  from flares.We have conducted several simultaneous spectroscopic
  and photometric observations of mid M dwarf flare stars using
  APO 3.5m/ARCES, SMARTS 1.5m/CHIRON, TESS, and ground- based 0.4-1m
  photometric telescopes. During 34 nights of observations, we detected
  48 flares in Balmer lines (e.g. H-alpha). Among them, at least 7
  flare events show clear blue asymmetries. Blue asymmetry durations
  are different among the 7 events (20min ~ 2hr).These results suggest
  upward flows of chromospheric plasma during flare events. By assuming
  that the blue asymmetries were caused by prominence eruptions, we
  estimate the mass and kinetic energy of the upward-moving material
  to be 10<SUP>15</SUP> - 10<SUP>18</SUP> g and 10<SUP>29 </SUP>-
  10<SUP>32</SUP> erg, respectively. The estimated masses are comparable
  to expectations from the empirical relation between the flare X-ray
  energy and mass of upward-moving material for stellar flares and
  solar CMEs. In contrast, the estimated kinetic energies for these
  non-white-light flares are roughly 2-3 orders of magnitude smaller than
  that expected from the relation between flare X-ray energy and kinetic
  energy for solar CMEs. This could be understood by the difference in
  the velocity between CMEs and prominence eruptions.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Redefining the Neupert Effect in M Dwarfs through
    Multi-Wavelength Timing Analysis of AU Mic's Flares
Authors: Tristan, Isaiah I.; Notsu, Yuta; Kowalski, Adam F.; Brown,
   Alexander; Vrijmoet, Eliot H.; Allred, Joel C.; Carter, Brad D.; Grady,
   Carol A.; Henry, Todd J.; Hinojosa, Rodrigo H.; Jao, Wei-Chun; Lomax,
   Jamie R.; Neff, James E.; Osten, Rachel A.; Paredes, Leonardo A.;
   Schneider, Glenn H.; Soutter, Jack; White, Graeme L.; Wisniewski,
   John P.
2021csss.confE.123T    Altcode:
  M dwarfs are considered one of the most likely places to find
  extraterrestrial life in part due to their large numbers in the
  nearby solar neighborhood. However, they have much more intense
  flaring events than stars like our Sun, which could negatively impact
  the habitability of close-in exoplanets. Our current understanding
  of the multi-wavelength connections of M dwarf flaring events is
  surprisingly far from complete, both in wavelength coverage and temporal
  resolution. To rectify this, our team collected multi-wavelength
  data of the dM1e flare star AU Mic over 7-days using a variety
  of telescopes. Here, we focus on data from XMM-Newton and the Las
  Cumbres Observatory Global Telescope (LCOGT) network. We discuss the
  Neupert effect among the X-ray, UV, and optical response in a sample of
  high-energy flares and present cumulative flare frequency distribution
  (CFFD) statistics. We find that AU Mic's U-band CFFD is consistent with
  other M dwarfs in the literature and that the Neupert effect (i.e. the
  X-ray derivative peak and NUV peak timings overlap) is not present
  in all characterized flares. We propose a new Neupert classification
  system that includes Quasi-Neupert (response in X-ray and NUV, but the
  timings do not match) and Non-Neupert (missing a response from either
  X-ray or NUV). Future work on this project includes adding existing
  AU Mic radio and H-alpha observations to our analysis and using our
  RADYN flare modeling program to determine the electron beam heating,
  proton beam heating, and magnetic mirroring needed to reproduce the
  full range of multi-wavelength responses we see in observations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Time-resolved spectroscopy and photometry of an M dwarf flare
star YZ Canis Minoris with OISTER and TESS: Blue asymmetry in H\alpha
    line during the non-white light flare
Authors: Maehara, Hiroyuki; Notsu, Yuta; Namekata, Kousuke; Honda,
   Satoshi; Kowalski, Adam F.; Katoh, Noriyuki; Ohshima, Tomohito; Iida,
   Kota; Oeda, Motoki; Murata, Katsuhiro L.; Yamanaka, Masayuki; Takagi,
   Kengo; Sasada, Mahito; Akitaya, Hiroshi; Ikuta, Kai; Okamoto, Soshi;
   Nogami, Daisaku; Shibata, Kazunari
2021csss.confE.142M    Altcode:
  Flares are thought to be the rapid releases of magnetic energy through
  magnetic reconnection in the corona. Blue asymmetries (enhancement of
  the blue wing) in chromospheric lines have been widely observed during
  flares on M dwarfs. They are thought to be caused by the upward motions
  of cool plasma (e.g., chromospheric evaporations, filament/prominence
  eruptions). As observed on the Sun, stellar filament/prominence
  eruptions can evolve into stellar CMEs (coronal mass ejections).Here
  we report the results from spectroscopic and photometric observations
  of the M-type flare star YZ CMi in the framework of the Optical and
  Infrared Synergetic Telescopes for Education and Research (OISTER)
  collaborations during the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite
  (TESS) observation period.We detected 145 white-light flares from the
  TESS light curve and 4 H(\alpha) flares from the OISTER observations
  performed between 2019-01-16 and 2019-01-18. Among them, 3 H(\alpha)
  flares were associated with white-light flares. However, one of them
  did not show clear brightening in continuum; during this flare, the
  H(\alpha) line exhibited blue-asymmetry which has lasted for (\sim
  60) min. The line of sight velocity of the blue-shifted component is
  (-80) - (-100) km s<SUP>-1</SUP>. By assuming that the blue-asymmetry
  in H(\alpha) line was caused by a prominence eruption on YZ CMi, we
  estimated the mass and kinetic energy of the upward-moving material
  to be (10^{16}) - (10^{18}) g and (10^{29.5}) - (10^{31.5}) erg,
  respectively.Although, the estimated mass is comparable to expectations
  from the empirical relation between the flare X-ray energy and mass of
  upward-moving material for solar CMEs, the estimated kinetic energy for
  the non-white-light flare on YZ CMi is roughly 2 orders of magnitude
  smaller than that expected from the relation between flare X-ray energy
  and kinetic energy for solar CMEs. This could be understood by the
  difference in the velocity between CMEs and prominence eruptions.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Time-resolved spectroscopy and photometry of M dwarf flare
star YZ Canis Minoris with OISTER and TESS: Blue asymmetry in the
    Hα line during the non-white light flare
Authors: Maehara, Hiroyuki; Notsu, Yuta; Namekata, Kousuke; Honda,
   Satoshi; Kowalski, Adam F.; Katoh, Noriyuki; Ohshima, Tomohito; Iida,
   Kota; Oeda, Motoki; Murata, Katsuhiro L.; Yamanaka, Masayuki; Takagi,
   Kengo; Sasada, Mahito; Akitaya, Hiroshi; Ikuta, Kai; Okamoto, Soshi;
   Nogami, Daisaku; Shibata, Kazunari
2021PASJ...73...44M    Altcode: 2020PASJ..tmp..253M; 2020arXiv200914412M
  In this paper, we present the results from spectroscopic and photometric
  observations of the M-type flare star YZ CMi in the framework of the
  Optical and Infrared Synergetic Telescopes for Education and Research
  (OISTER) collaborations during the Transiting Exoplanet Survey
  Satellite (TESS) observation period. We detected 145 white-light
  flares from the TESS light-curve and four Hα flares from the OISTER
  observations performed between 2019 January 16 and 18. Among them,
  three Hα flares were associated with white-light flares. However,
  one of them did not show clear brightening in the continuum; during
  this flare, the Hα line exhibited blue asymmetry which lasted for
  ∼60 min. The line-of-sight velocity of the blueshifted component is
  in the range from -80 to -100 km s<SUP>-1</SUP>. This suggests that
  there can be upward flows of chromospheric cool plasma even without
  detectable red/near-infrared (NIR) continuum brightening. By assuming
  that the blue asymmetry in the Hα line was caused by a prominence
  eruption on YZ CMi, we estimated the mass and kinetic energy of the
  upward-moving material to be 10<SUP>16</SUP>-10<SUP>18</SUP> g and
  10<SUP>29.5</SUP>-10<SUP>31.5</SUP> erg, respectively. The estimated
  mass is comparable to expectations from the empirical relation between
  the flare X-ray energy and mass of upward-moving material for stellar
  flares and solar coronal mass ejections (CMEs). In contrast, the
  estimated kinetic energy for the non-white-light flare on YZ CMi is
  roughly two orders of magnitude smaller than that expected from the
  relation between flare X-ray energy and kinetic energy for solar
  CMEs. This could be understood by the difference in the velocity
  between CMEs and prominence eruptions.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Blue asymmetries in Balmer lines during mid M dwarf flares
Authors: Notsu, Y.; Kowalski, A.; Maehara, H.; Namekata, K.; Honda,
   S.; Enoto, T.; Hamaguchi, K.; Tristan, I.; Hawley, S.; Davenport,
   J.; Okamoto, S.; Ikuta, K.; Nogami, D.; Shibata, K.
2021AAS...23751501N    Altcode:
  Flares are releases of magnetic energy in the solar/stellar atmosphere,
  and they have strong emissions from radio to X-rays. During some
  M dwarf flares, chromospheric line profiles show blue asymmetries
  (Honda et al. 2018), although red asymmetries are more commonly
  observed in solar flares. Similar enhancements of the blue wings of
  Balmer lines may provide clues for investigating the early phases
  of stellar coronal mass ejections (CMEs) during flares (cf. Vida et
  al. 2016&amp;2019), but this is still controversial. Thus, we need
  more flare spectroscopic observations with high time resolution
  to understand the relationship between mass ejections and flaring
  events. The latter is helpful for estimating the impact on planets
  from flares. We have conducted several simultaneous spectroscopic
  and photometric observations of mid M dwarf flare stars using APO
  3.5m/ARCES, SMARTS 1.5m/CHIRON, Nayuta 2m/MALLS (high-dispersion
  spectroscopy), TESS (space high-precision single-color photometry),
  and ground-based 0.4-1m telescopes (ground-based photometry). During
  ~20 nights of observations, we detected more than 30 flares in Balmer
  lines (e.g. Hα). Among them, at least 6 flare events (including one
  already reported in Maehara et al. 2020) show clear blue asymmetries,
  but none show brightening in the continuum. Blue asymmetry durations are
  different among the 6 events (20min ~ 2hr). These results suggest upward
  flows of chromospheric plasma during "non-white light" flare events. By
  assuming that the blue asymmetries were caused by prominence eruptions,
  we estimate the mass and kinetic energy of the upward-moving material to
  be 10<SUP>15</SUP>-10<SUP>18</SUP> g and 10<SUP>29</SUP>-10<SUP>32</SUP>
  erg, respectively. The estimated masses are comparable to expectations
  from the empirical relation between the flare X-ray energy and mass of
  upward-moving material for stellar flares and solar CMEs. In contrast,
  the estimated kinetic energies for these non-white-light flares are
  roughly 2 orders of magnitude smaller than that expected from the
  relation between flare X-ray energy and kinetic energy for solar
  CMEs. This could be understood by the difference in the velocity
  between CMEs and prominence eruptions.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Superflares investigated with Kepler&amp;TESS photometric
    data and recent multi-wavelength campaign observations
Authors: Notsu, Yuta; Shibata, Kazunari; Enoto, Teruaki; Hamaguchi,
   Kenji; Honda, Satoshi; Maehara, Hiroyuki; Nogami, Daisaku; Namekata,
   Kosuke; Ikuta, Kai; Kowalski, Adam; Hawley, Suzanne; Davenport, James;
   Okamoto, Soshi; Notsu, Shota
2021cosp...43E1750N    Altcode:
  Solar flares are frequent energetic explosions in the solar atmosphere,
  and are thought to occur by impulsive releases of magnetic energy
  stored around sunspots. Large solar flares sometimes can have large
  impacts on our Earth and society (e.g., magnetic storms). Stars other
  than the Sun also show flares. Many young stars, active M-dwarfs known
  as flare stars, and close binary stars have “superflares”, which are
  flares that have a total energy 10--10$^{6}$ times larger than that of
  the largest solar flares on the Sun ($\sim$10$^{32}$ erg). These stars
  generally rotate very fast (Period $\sim$ 2--3 days). In contrast, the
  Sun slowly rotates (Period $\sim$25 days). Then it had been thought that
  superflares cannot occur on slowly-rotating G-type main-sequence stars
  like the Sun. Recently, more than 1000 superflares on solar-type stars
  (G-type main sequence stars) have been found using the photometric
  data of Kepler spece telescope (and also TESS satellite). Using these
  large number of data, it is now possible to do statistical studies
  of superflares on solar-type stars. First, superflare stars are well
  characterized by the existence of large starspots on the surface,
  and their magnetic fluxes can explain well superflare energies. Then,
  maximum superflare energy continuously decreases as the rotation period
  increases. Superflares with their energy $\le \sim$ 5$\times$10$^{34}$
  erg (a few hundred times larger than the largest solar flares) would
  occur on old slowly-rotating Sun-like stars (Rotation Period $\sim$25
  days) once every 2000-3000 years, while young rapidly-rotating
  stars with Rotation Period $\sim$ a few days have superflares up
  to 10$^{36}$ erg. These results presented in this work support that
  even slowly-rotating stars similar to the Sun can have superflares,
  considering long-term activity level changes. In addition to these
  photometric observation results of solar-type superflare stars, cool
  M-dwarf superflare stars have been investigated in more detail by
  recent multi-wavelength surveys. For example, Hydrogen chromospheric
  lines during flares show a lot of blue-shifted profiles, which can give
  us some hints on dynamics or mass ejections during superflares. In
  the main part of this review talk, I review the recent statistical
  results of superflares from Kepler\&amp;TESS data. Then in the latter
  part, I also briefly discuss the results of recent multi-wavelength
  campaign observations of M-dwarf superflares, and finally show the
  future prospects of superflare studies, which are closely related with
  solar physics and studies of effects on planets.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Out of Sync: Redefining the Neupert Effect in M Dwarfs through
    Multi-Wavelength Timing Analysis of AU Mic's Flares
Authors: Tristan, I. I.; Notsu, Y.; Kowalski, A. F.; Brown, A.;
   Vrijmoet, E. H.; Allred, J. C.; Carter, B. D.; Grady, C. A.; Henry,
   T. J.; Hinojosa, R. H.; Jao, W.; Lomax, J. R.; Neff, J. E.; Osten,
   R. A.; Paredes, L. A.; Schneider, G. H.; Soutter, J.; White, G. L.;
   Wisniewski, J. P.
2021AAS...23755002T    Altcode:
  M dwarfs are considered one of the most likely places to find
  extraterrestrial life in part due to their large numbers in the
  nearby solar neighborhood. However, they have much more intense
  flaring events than stars like our Sun, which could negatively impact
  the habitability of close-in exoplanets. Our current understanding
  of the multi-wavelength connections of M dwarf flaring events is
  surprisingly far from complete, both in wavelength coverage and temporal
  resolution. To rectify this, our team collected multi-wavelength
  data of the dM1e flare star AU Mic over 7-days with the Neil Gehrels
  Swift Observatory, XMM-Newton, the Las Cumbres Observatory Global
  Telescope (LCOGT) network, the Small and Moderate Aperture Telescope
  Research System (SMARTS) 0.9m and 1.5m telescopes at the Cerro Tololo
  Inter-American Observatory, the ARC 3.5m at APO, the ATCA, and the
  Jansky Very Large Array. Here we discuss the Neupert effect among the
  X-ray, UV, and optical response in a sample of high-energy flares. We
  present high time-resolution light curves, flare correlations across
  the spectrum, and cumulative flare frequency distribution (CFFD)
  statistics. We find that AU Mic's U-band CFFD is consistent with other
  M dwarfs in the literature, that the Neupert effect (i.e. the X-ray
  derivative peak and NUV peak timings overlap) is not present in all
  characterized flares, and that while timing differences between the U
  and UVW2 flare peaks are small (&lt;2 min.), their decay timings are
  not always similar. We propose a new Neupert classification system that
  includes Quasi-Neupert (response in X-ray and NUV, but the timings
  do not match) and Non-Neupert (missing a response from either X-ray
  or NUV). Future work on this project includes adding existing AU Mic
  radio and Hα observations to our analysis and using our RADYN flare
  modeling program to determine the electron beam heating, proton beam
  heating, and magnetic mirroring needed to reproduce the full range of
  multi-wavelength responses we see in observations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Discovery of an Extremely Short Duration 'Building Block'
    Flare from Proxima Cen Using Millimeter through FUV Observations
Authors: MacGregor, M. A.; Weinberger, A. J.; Loyd, P.; Shkolnik,
   E. L.; Barclay, T.; Osten, R.; Howard, W. S.; Zic, A.; Cranmer, S. R.;
   Kowalski, A. F.; Youngblood, A.; Estes, A.; Wilner, D. J.; Forbrich,
   J.; Murphy, T.; Law, N.; Hughes, A.; Boley, A.; Tristan, I. I.; Fuson,
   J. F.; Matthews, J.
2021AAS...23751502M    Altcode:
  At a distance of only 1.3 pc, Proxima Cen is the closest exoplanetary
  system orbiting an M-type flare star, making it a benchmark
  case to explore the properties and potential effects of stellar
  activity on exoplanet atmospheres. Our previous discovery of a flare
  from Proxima Cen at millimeter wavelengths with the Atacama Large
  Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) has opened up an entirely new
  observational regime to study stellar flaring mechanisms. These are the
  first results from a larger campaign consisting of roughly 40 hours of
  simultaneous observations spanning radio to X-ray wavelengths. Here,
  we present the discovery of a second flaring event on 1 May 2019 from
  Proxima Cen with ALMA, but this time complemented by multi-wavelength
  observations with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) of far-ultraviolet
  (FUV) spectroscopy, the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS)
  of optical photometry, and the DuPont telescope at Las Campanas of
  optical spectroscopy. In the millimeter and FUV, the May 1 flare is
  the brightest ever detected from Proxima Cen, brightening by a factor
  of &gt;1000 and &gt;14000 as seen by ALMA and HST, respectively. The
  millimeter and FUV continuum emission trace each other very closely
  during the flare, exhibiting similar rise and decay times, peaking near
  simultaneously, and achieving large enhancements in luminosity. Optical
  emission is somewhat decoupled, peaking at a much lower level with
  a slight time delay. Given the unique characteristics of this event,
  it is possible that we are seeing an entirely new type of flare. The
  extremely short duration of this event suggests that it could
  originate from a single flare loop or 'building block' instead of an
  arcade structure consisting of multiple superimposed loops. The strong
  correlation between millimeter and FUV emission allows us to determine
  a tentative scaling relation. If this holds for a larger sample of
  events, millimeter emission could serve as a proxy for FUV emission
  from stellar flares and become a powerful new tool to constrain the
  high energy radiation environment of planets orbiting flare stars,
  required input for models of planetary atmosphere evolution.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Constraining wave propagation throughout the solar atmosphere
    with IBIS, ALMA and IRIS
Authors: Molnar, M.; Reardon, K.; Cranmer, S. R.; Kowalski, A. F.
2020AGUFMSH0010003M    Altcode:
  The heating mechanism of the solar chromosphere is still an open
  scientific question. We present observational constraints on the
  high-frequency (acoustic) wave contribution to the chromospheric
  heating. We utilize a unique combination of observations from NSO's
  Dunn Solar Telescope and the Atacama Large Millimeter Array obtained on
  April 23rd 2017 to estimate the high-frequency wave flux in the lower
  solar atmosphere. We extend this study to the upper chromosphere and
  the transition region with archival IRIS data. We infer the wave flux
  through comparison of the observations with synthetic observables
  from the time-dependent hydrodynamic RADYN code. Our findings are
  able to constrain the wave flux at higher altitudes in the solar
  atmosphere than previous works using similar approaches. Furthermore,
  the different diagnostics we use form at different heights, which
  allow us to explore the propagation and dissipation of waves with
  height. We will discuss future plans to extend this work with more
  advanced modeling and additional observations with the upcoming Innoue
  Solar Telescope (DKIST).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: FP: A Fokker-Planck solver for modeling the transport of
    flare-accelerated particles
Authors: Allred, J. C.; Alaoui, M.; Kowalski, A. F.; Kerr, G. S.
2020AGUFMSH0500010A    Altcode:
  We present a new open-source computational model, FP, that solves the
  Fokker Planck equation to model the transport of flare-accelerated
  particles at the top of magnetic flux loops to their eventual
  thermalization in the footpoints. Our technique includes forces
  corresponding to Coulomb collisions including second order energy
  diffusion and pitch-angle diffusion, magnetic mirroring, synchrotron
  emission and, critically, energy loss due to the return current electric
  field. It is applicable to particles of arbitrary mass and charge. In
  the case of nonthermal electrons, FP predicts the bremsstrahlung
  produced as they collide with the ambient solar atmosphere. We have
  incorporated FP into the OSPEX X-ray spectral analysis tool. We
  use OSPEX+FP to fit X-ray spectra observed by RHESSI to constrain
  nonthermal electron distributions in the SOL2013-05-13T16:01 X-class
  solar flare. This flare shows a large spectral break, likely indicating
  the effect of the return current electric field on nonthermal electrons.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High-Cadence DST/ROSA Observations of the NUV/Blue Continuum
    Radiation in a Solar Flare
Authors: Kowalski, A. F.; Keys, P.; Mathioudakis, M.
2020AGUFMSH0500011K    Altcode:
  Radiative-hydrodynamic models of solar flares provide sophisticated
  predictions of the ultraviolet and optical continuum shape and
  strength on shorter than 1 s timescales covering a broad wavelength
  range. However, most optical observations of solar flares in the
  modern era are not obtained at fast cadence and are not optimized
  at blue continuum wavelengths, which provide a critical constraint
  on the heating properties at large column mass. To rectify this
  major gap in our knowledge of solar flare spectra, custom Balmer
  jump filters were designed for the ROSA instrument at the Dunn Solar
  Telescope. Unprecedented observations at 7.5 - 30 frames per second
  were obtained covering the C9.7 flare SOL20141025T15:52 in NOAA AR
  12192 during the NSO's Service Mode operations (and provided by the
  F-CHROMA solar flare database). We report on how the flare response in
  the 350 nm and 417 nm ROSA filters constrains several common assumptions
  employed in modern flare modeling, such as the duration of individual
  heating bursts. We also report on the Balmer jump properties in this
  flare and compare to several M dwarf flares, which have been observed
  in identical filters using the ULTRACAM and ARCTIC instruments on the
  4.2m WHT, the 3.6m NTT, and the 3.5m ARC telescope. We compare the
  light curves to radiative-hydrodynamic model predictions of the 350
  nm brightness evolution on short timescales.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The High-energy Radiation Environment around a 10 Gyr M Dwarf:
    Habitable at Last?
Authors: France, Kevin; Duvvuri, Girish; Egan, Hilary; Koskinen, Tommi;
   Wilson, David J.; Youngblood, Allison; Froning, Cynthia S.; Brown,
   Alexander; Alvarado-Gómez, Julián D.; Berta-Thompson, Zachory K.;
   Drake, Jeremy J.; Garraffo, Cecilia; Kaltenegger, Lisa; Kowalski,
   Adam F.; Linsky, Jeffrey L.; Loyd, R. O. Parke; Mauas, Pablo J. D.;
   Miguel, Yamila; Pineda, J. Sebastian; Rugheimer, Sarah; Schneider,
   P. Christian; Tian, Feng; Vieytes, Mariela
2020AJ....160..237F    Altcode: 2020arXiv200901259F
  Recent work has demonstrated that high levels of X-ray and UV activity
  on young M dwarfs may drive rapid atmospheric escape on temperate,
  terrestrial planets orbiting within the habitable zone. However,
  secondary atmospheres on planets orbiting older, less active M
  dwarfs may be stable and present more promising candidates for
  biomarker searches. In order to evaluate the potential habitability
  of Earth-like planets around old, inactive M dwarfs, we present new
  Hubble Space Telescope and Chandra X-ray Observatory observations of
  Barnard&amp;'s Star (GJ 699), a 10 Gyr old M3.5 dwarf, acquired as part
  of the Mega-MUSCLES program. Despite the old age and long rotation
  period of Barnard&amp;'s Star, we observe two FUV (δ<SUB>130</SUB>
  ≍ 5000 s; E<SUB>130</SUB> ≍ 10<SUP>29.5</SUP> erg each) and one
  X-ray (E<SUB>X</SUB> ≍ 10<SUP>29.2</SUP> erg) flares, and we estimate
  a high-energy flare duty cycle (defined here as the fraction of the
  time the star is in a flare state) of ∼25%. A publicly available
  5 Å to 10 μm spectral energy distribution of GJ 699 is created
  and used to evaluate the atmospheric stability of a hypothetical,
  unmagnetized terrestrial planet in the habitable zone (r<SUB>HZ</SUB>
  ∼ 0.1 au). Both thermal and nonthermal escape modeling indicate (1)
  the quiescent stellar XUV flux does not lead to strong atmospheric
  escape: atmospheric heating rates are comparable to periods of high
  solar activity on modern Earth, and (2) the flare environment could
  drive the atmosphere into a hydrodynamic loss regime at the observed
  flare duty cycle: sustained exposure to the flare environment of GJ
  699 results in the loss of ≍87 Earth atmospheres Gyr<SUP>-1</SUP>
  through thermal processes and ≍3 Earth atmospheres Gyr<SUP>-1</SUP>
  through ion loss processes. These results suggest that if rocky planet
  atmospheres can survive the initial ∼5 Gyr of high stellar activity,
  or if a second-generation atmosphere can be formed or acquired, the
  flare duty cycle may be the controlling stellar parameter for the
  stability of Earth-like atmospheres around old M stars.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Modeling the Transport of Nonthermal Particles in Flares
    Using Fokker-Planck Kinetic Theory
Authors: Allred, Joel C.; Alaoui, Meriem; Kowalski, Adam F.; Kerr,
   Graham S.
2020ApJ...902...16A    Altcode: 2020arXiv200810671A
  We describe a new approach for modeling the transport of high-energy
  particles accelerated during flares from the acceleration region
  in the solar corona until their eventual thermalization in the
  flare footpoint. Our technique numerically solves the Fokker-Planck
  equation and includes forces corresponding to Coulomb collisions in a
  flux loop with nonuniform ionization, synchrotron emission reaction,
  magnetic mirroring, and a return current electric field. Our solution
  to the Fokker-Planck equation includes second-order pitch angle and
  momentum diffusion. It is applicable to particles of arbitrary mass
  and charge. By tracking the collisions, we predict the bremsstrahlung
  produced as these particles interact with the ambient stellar
  atmosphere. This can be compared directly with observations and used
  to constrain the accelerated particle energy distribution. We have
  named our numerical code FP and distributed it for general use. We
  demonstrate its effectiveness in several test cases.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar Flare Energy Partitioning and Transport -- the Impulsive
    Phase (a Heliophysics 2050 White Paper)
Authors: Kerr, Graham S.; Alaoui, Meriem; Allred, Joel C.; Bian,
   Nicholas H.; Dennis, Brian R.; Emslie, A. Gordon; Fletcher, Lyndsay;
   Guidoni, Silvina; Hayes, Laura A.; Holman, Gordon D.; Hudson, Hugh
   S.; Karpen, Judith T.; Kowalski, Adam F.; Milligan, Ryan O.; Polito,
   Vanessa; Qiu, Jiong; Ryan, Daniel F.
2020arXiv200908400K    Altcode:
  Solar flares are a fundamental component of solar eruptive events (SEEs;
  along with solar energetic particles, SEPs, and coronal mass ejections,
  CMEs). Flares are the first component of the SEE to impact our
  atmosphere, which can set the stage for the arrival of the associated
  SEPs and CME. Magnetic reconnection drives SEEs by restructuring the
  solar coronal magnetic field, liberating a tremendous amount of energy
  which is partitioned into various physical manifestations: particle
  acceleration, mass and magnetic-field eruption, atmospheric heating,
  and the subsequent emission of radiation as solar flares. To explain
  and ultimately predict these geoeffective events, the heliophysics
  community requires a comprehensive understanding of the processes that
  transform and distribute stored magnetic energy into other forms,
  including the broadband radiative enhancement that characterises
  flares. This white paper, submitted to the Heliophysics 2050 Workshop,
  discusses the flare impulsive phase part of SEEs, setting out the
  questions that need addressing via a combination of theoretical,
  modelling, and observational research. In short, by 2050 we must
  determine the mechanisms of particle acceleration and propagation,
  and must push beyond the paradigm of energy transport via nonthermal
  electron beams, to also account for accelerated protons &amp; ions
  and downward directed Alfven waves.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar Flare Energy Partitioning and Transport -- the Gradual
    Phase (a Heliophysics 2050 White Paper)
Authors: Kerr, Graham S.; Alaoui, Meriem; Allred, Joel C.; Bian,
   Nicholas H.; Dennis, Brian R.; Emslie, A. Gordon; Fletcher, Lyndsay;
   Guidoni, Silvina; Hayes, Laura A.; Holman, Gordon D.; Hudson, Hugh
   S.; Karpen, Judith T.; Kowalski, Adam F.; Milligan, Ryan O.; Polito,
   Vanessa; Qiu, Jiong; Ryan, Daniel F.
2020arXiv200908407K    Altcode:
  Solar flares are a fundamental component of solar eruptive events
  (SEEs; along with solar energetic particles, SEPs, and coronal
  mass ejections, CMEs). Flares are the first component of the SEE
  to impact our atmosphere, which can set the stage for the arrival
  of the associated SEPs and CME. Magnetic reconnection drives SEEs
  by restructuring the solar coronal magnetic field, liberating a
  tremendous amount of energy which is partitioned into various physical
  manifestations: particle acceleration, mass and magnetic-field eruption,
  atmospheric heating, and the subsequent emission of radiation as solar
  flares. To explain and ultimately predict these geoeffective events,
  the heliophysics community requires a comprehensive understanding of
  the processes that transform and distribute stored magnetic energy
  into other forms, including the broadband radiative enhancement that
  characterises flares. This white paper, submitted to the Heliophysics
  2050 Workshop, discusses the flare gradual phase part of SEEs, setting
  out the questions that need addressing via a combination of theoretical,
  modelling, and observational research. In short, the flare gradual phase
  persists much longer than predicted so, by 2050, we must identify the
  characteristics of the significant energy deposition sustaining the
  gradual phase, and address the fundamental processes of turbulence
  and non-local heat flux.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Optical and X-ray observations of stellar flares on an active
    M dwarf AD Leonis with the Seimei Telescope, SCAT, NICER, and OISTER
Authors: Namekata, Kosuke; Maehara, Hiroyuki; Sasaki, Ryo; Kawai,
   Hiroki; Notsu, Yuta; Kowalski, Adam F.; Allred, Joel C.; Iwakiri,
   Wataru; Tsuboi, Yohko; Murata, Katsuhiro L.; Niwano, Masafumi;
   Shiraishi, Kazuki; Adachi, Ryo; Iida, Kota; Oeda, Motoki; Honda,
   Satoshi; Tozuka, Miyako; Katoh, Noriyuki; Onozato, Hiroki; Okamoto,
   Soshi; Isogai, Keisuke; Kimura, Mariko; Kojiguchi, Naoto; Wakamatsu,
   Yasuyuki; Tampo, Yusuke; Nogami, Daisaku; Shibata, Kazunari
2020PASJ...72...68N    Altcode: 2020arXiv200504336N; 2020PASJ..tmp..218N
  We report on multi-wavelength monitoring observations of an M-dwarf
  flare star AD Leonis with the Seimei Telescope (6150-7930 Å), SCAT
  (Spectroscopic Chuo-university Astronomical Telescope; 3700-7500 Å),
  and NICER (Neutron Star Interior Composition Explorer; 0.2-12.0
  keV), with the collaboration of the OISTER (Optical and Infrared
  Synergetic Telescopes for Education and Research) program. Twelve
  flares are detected in total, including ten Hα, four X-ray, and
  four optical-continuum flares; one of them is a superflare with a
  total energy of ∼2.0 × 10<SUP>33</SUP> erg. We found that: (1)
  during the superflare, the Hα emission line full width at 1/8 maximum
  dramatically increases to 14 Å from 8 Å in the low-resolution spectra
  (R ∼ 2000) accompanied by large white-light flares, (2) some weak
  Hα/X-ray flares are not accompanied by white-light emissions, and (3)
  the non-flaring emissions show clear rotational modulations in X-ray
  and Hα intensity in the same phase. To understand these observational
  features, one-dimensional hydrodynamic flare simulations are performed
  using the RADYN code. We find the simulated Hα line profiles with
  hard and high-energy non-thermal electron beams to be consistent with
  the initial phase line profiles of the superflares, while those with
  a softer and/or weak-energy beam are consistent with those in decay
  phases, indicating the changes in the energy fluxes injected to the
  lower atmosphere. Also, we find that the relation between the optical
  continuum and Hα intensity is nonlinear, which can be one cause of the
  non-white-light flares. The flare energy budget exhibits diversity in
  the observations and models, and more observations of stellar flares
  are necessary for constraining the occurrence of various emission line
  phenomena in stellar flares.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High-frequency Wave Power Observed in the Chromosphere with
    IBIS and ALMA
Authors: Molnar, M. E.; Cranmer, S.; Reardon, K.; Kowalski, A.
2020SPD....5120106M    Altcode:
  The heating mechanism of the solar chromosphere is still an open
  scientific question. In this work we study observational constraints on
  the contribution to chromospheric heating from high-frequency acoustic
  waves. We utilize a unique combination of observations from NSO's Dunn
  Solar Telescope and from the Atacama Large Millimeter Array obtained
  on April 23rd 2017 to estimate the high-frequency wave flux in the
  lower solar atmosphere. The wave flux is inferred from comparison of
  the observations with synthetic observables from the time-dependent
  hydrodynamic RADYN code. Our findings suggest thatacoustic waves may
  carry up to a few kW/m<SUP>2</SUP> of flux, which is comparable to
  what is required to heat the quiet chromosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Measuring Decay Timescales of Downflows in Solar Flare
Footpoints: Testing the One-minute Theory (Abstract)
Authors: Beltzer-Sweeney, A. K.; Butler, E.; Kowalski, A.; Cauzzi, G.
2020JAVSO..48R.107B    Altcode:
  (Abstract only) In 1989 George Fisher found analytically that
  chromospheric downflows in flare footprints should slow down to
  background detection levels within ~ 1 minute regardless of the initial
  energy injected. We set to test this theory by measuring downflows in
  flare kernels that were observed by the IRIS satellite between 2014
  and 2017. The GOES classification system was used as a proxy for
  the energy of the nonthermal electron beam that is thought to heat
  the flare footprint. The redshift evolution of a Mg II triplet line
  was measured in twenty-six C, M, and X class flares to determine the
  timescale of deceleration of the chromospheric plasma in response to
  explosive flare heating. Two different methods for measuring the decay
  of the redshift as a function of time, bisector and gaussian, were
  used to test the robustness of the inferred downflow gas velocities
  across the wide variety of flares. Results of the analysis show
  that downflow velocities reached 30 ~ 50 km/s, which is consistent
  with previous results with a derived Mach number of 4 ~ 5. The times
  of half-maximum velocity were found to be between 15 ~ 30 seconds,
  indicating a rapid slowing. At later times, the Mg II line profiles
  exhibit prolonged redshifts with inferred speeds of 5 to 7 km/s.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Spectral Characteristics and Formation Height of Off-limb
    Flare Ribbons
Authors: Kuridze, David; Mathioudakis, Mihalis; Heinzel, Petr; Koza,
   Július; Morgan, Huw; Oliver, Ramon; Kowalski, Adam F.; Allred, Joel C.
2020ApJ...896..120K    Altcode: 2020arXiv200510924K
  Flare ribbons are bright manifestations of flare energy dissipation
  in the lower solar atmosphere. For the first time, we report on
  high-resolution imaging spectroscopy observations of flare ribbons
  situated off limb in the Hβ and Ca II 8542 Å lines and make a detailed
  comparison with radiative hydrodynamic simulations. Observations of
  the X8.2 class solar flare SOL 2017-09-10T16:06 UT obtained with the
  Swedish Solar Telescope reveal bright horizontal emission layers
  in Hβ line-wing images located near the footpoints of the flare
  loops. The apparent separation between the ribbon observed in the Hβ
  wing and the nominal photospheric limb is about 300-500 km. The Ca II
  8542 Å line-wing images show much fainter ribbon emissions located
  right on the edge of the limb, without clear separation from the
  limb. RADYN models are used to investigate synthetic spectral line
  profiles for the flaring atmosphere, and good agreement is found
  with the observations. The simulations show that, toward the limb,
  where the line of sight is substantially oblique with respect to the
  vertical direction, the flaring atmosphere model reproduces the high
  contrast of the off-limb Hβ ribbons and their significant elevation
  above the photosphere. The ribbons in the Ca II 8542 Å line-wing
  images are located deeper in the lower solar atmosphere with a lower
  contrast. A comparison of the height deposition of electron beam energy
  and the intensity contribution function shows that the Hβ line-wing
  intensities can be a useful tracer of flare energy deposition in the
  lower solar atmosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Spectral Signatures of Chromospheric Condensation in a Major
    Solar Flare
Authors: Graham, David R.; Cauzzi, Gianna; Zangrilli, Luca; Kowalski,
   Adam; Simões, Paulo; Allred, Joel
2020ApJ...895....6G    Altcode: 2020arXiv200405075G
  We study the evolution of chromospheric line and continuum emission
  during the impulsive phase of the X-class SOL2014-09-10T17:45
  solar flare. We extend previous analyses of this flare to multiple
  chromospheric lines of Fe I, Fe II, Mg II, C I, and Si II observed
  with the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph, combined with
  radiative-hydrodynamical (RHD) modeling. For multiple flaring kernels,
  the lines all show a rapidly evolving double-component structure: an
  enhanced emission component at rest, and a broad, highly redshifted
  component of comparable intensity. The redshifted components migrate
  from 25 to 50 km s<SUP>-1</SUP> toward the rest wavelength within ∼30
  s. Using Fermi hard X-ray observations, we derive the parameters of
  an accelerated electron beam impacting the dense chromosphere, using
  them to drive an RHD simulation with the RADYN code. As in Kowalski
  et al. (2017), our simulations show that the most energetic electrons
  penetrate into the deep chromosphere, heating it to T ∼ 10,000 K,
  while the bulk of the electrons dissipate their energy higher, driving
  an explosive evaporation, and its counterpart condensation—a very
  dense (n<SUB>e</SUB> ∼ 2 × 10<SUP>14</SUP> cm<SUP>-3</SUP>), thin
  layer (30-40 km thickness), heated to 8-12,000 K, moving toward the
  stationary chromosphere at up to 50 km s<SUP>-1</SUP>. The synthetic
  Fe II 2814.45 Å profiles closely resemble the observational
  data, including a continuum enhancement, and both a stationary
  and a highly redshifted component, rapidly moving toward the rest
  wavelength. Importantly, the absolute continuum intensity, ratio
  of component intensities, relative time of appearance, and redshift
  amplitude are sensitive to the model input parameters, showing great
  potential as diagnostics.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Diagnosing a New Species of Dusty Debris: the Chameleon
    Debris Disk
Authors: Wisniewski, John P.; Arnold, Jessica; Boccaletti, Anthony;
   Debes, John Henry; Grady, Carol A.; Kowalski, Adam F.; Lomax, Jamie
   R.; Sezestre, Elie; Weinberger, Alycia J.
2020hst..prop16263W    Altcode:
  Two new, potentially causally correlated, observational phenomena
  have recently been discovered in spatially resolved imagery of debris
  disks: outward moving features traveling at super-Keplerian velocities
  and changes in the color of the AU Mic debris disk. To date, these
  are the only moving structures and the only observed color change
  seen in spatially resolved debris disks. We propose to use the only
  observational facility capable of yielding high fidelity optical
  coronagraphic spectroscopy of AU Mic's disk, HST/STIS, to obtain second
  epoch G750L and first epoch G430L spectroscopy. These data will enable
  us to: a) quantify color changes in the disk over a 2x greater time
  baseline (16 yrs) than previously achieved; b) determine whether the
  disk's color between 30-45 au continues to change as additional fast
  moving features pass by; c) better quantify the size of dust grains
  whose spatial distribution has changed; and d) confirm and better
  quantify whether small grains populate small (10-30 au) stellocentric
  distances. Derived grain size distributions will be linked to dynamical
  models proposed for the origin of fast moving features in this system.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Outflows and Disks around Young Stars: Synergies for the
    Exploration of Ullyses Spectra (ODYSSEUS)
Authors: Herczeg, Gregory J.; Espaillat, Catherine; Abraham, Peter;
   Alcala, Juan M.; Alencar, Silvia; Alexander, Richard; Antoniucci,
   Simone; Ardila, David R.; Arulanantham, Nicole; Bacciotti, Francesca;
   Beck, Tracy; Benisty, Myriam; Bergin, Edwin Anthony; Biazzo, Katia;
   Bouvier, Jerome; Briceno, Cesar; Brown, Alexander; Cabrit, Sylvie;
   Calvet, Nuria; Cleeves, Ilse; Coffey, Deirdre; Dougados, Catherine;
   Edwards, Suzan; Eisloeffel, Jochen; Facchini, Stefano; Fedele, Davide;
   Fischer, William J.; France, Kevin; Frasca, Antonio; Froebrich,
   Dirk; Grankin, Konstantin; Guenther, Hans Moritz; Hartmann, Lee W.;
   Hernandez, Jesus Omar; Hussain, Gaitee; Johns-Krull, Christopher
   Michael; Kama, Mihkel; Kastner, Joel H.; Koen, Chris; Kospal, Agnes;
   Kowalski, Adam F.; Manara, Carlo F.; Miotello, Anna; Muzerolle, James;
   Nisini, Brunella; Panwar, Neelam; Principe, David; Robberto, Massimo;
   Robinson, Connor; Schneider, Christian; Thanathibodee, Thanawuth;
   Valenti, Jeff A.; Walter, Frederick M.; Williams, Jonathan P.; Xu,
   Ziyan; Yadav, Ram Kesh
2020hst..prop16129H    Altcode:
  The ULLYSES DDT Survey of low-mass pre-main sequence stars, coupled
  with forthcoming data from ALMA and JWST, will provide the foundation
  to revolutionize our understanding of the relationship between young
  stars and their protoplanetary disks. A comprehensive evaluation of the
  physics of disk evolution and planet formation requires understanding
  the intricate relationships between the mass accretion, mass outflow,
  and disk structure. Our team of 55 young star experts from around
  the world will bring their combined knowledge to bear on the ULLYSES
  FUV spectral database, ensuring a uniform and systematic approach in
  order to (1) measure how the accretion flow depends on the accretion
  rate and magnetic structures, (2) determine where winds and jets
  are launched and how mass loss rates compare to accretion, and (3)
  establish the influence of FUV radiation on the chemistry of the warm
  inner regions of planet-forming disks. We will also work together to
  acquire and provide contemporaneous observations at X-ray, optical,
  near-IR, and mm wavelengths to enhance the impact of the ULLYSES
  data. By the end of our comprehensive 3-year program, we will provide
  the best measurements of the levels and evolution of mass accretion
  of protoplanetary disks, the properties and magnitudes of (inner)
  disk mass loss, and the UV radiation fields that determine ionization
  levels and drive disk chemistry. This team addresses the need for
  labor essential to maximize the scientific return on the ULYSSES DDT
  young star program, in line with funding requests allocated to Legacy
  GO programs or Treasury programs.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Neutron Production in M dwarf Flares
Authors: Kowalski, A. F.
2020AAS...23517320K    Altcode:
  M dwarfs are the most promising places for discovering Earth-mass
  exoplanets in or near the traditional habitable zone. However, the
  effects on habitability from M dwarf flares and their associated
  (possible) coronal mass ejections are widely debated. An additional
  factor that must be considered to evaluate the high-energy space weather
  environment of M dwarfs is flare neutrons. High energy neutrons are
  often detected during solar flares, but there are few that survive
  to 1 au. We present the first calculations of neutron production and
  propagation during M dwarf flares, and we estimate radiation doses on
  the surfaces of hypothetical exoplanets. We discuss future prospects
  with transit spectroscopy with the JWST and how flare neutrons provide
  an unparalleled probe of particle acceleration and the heating in the
  lower flaring stellar atmosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Blue asymmetries of Balmer lines during M-dwarf flares
    investigated with multi-wavelength observations
Authors: Notsu, Y.; Kowalski, A.; Maehara, H.; Namekata, K.; Hawley,
   S.; Davenport, J.; Enoto, T.; Hamaguchi, K.; Honda, S.; Notsu, S.;
   Ikuta, K.; Nogami, D.; Shibata, K.
2020AAS...23528805N    Altcode:
  Flares are magnetic energy release in the solar/stellar atmosphere,
  and they have strong emissions from radio to X-rays. During some
  M-dwarf superflares, chromospheric line profiles show blue asymmetries
  (Honda et al. 2018), though red asymmetries have been seen during many
  ordinary solar flares. it is also thought that similar enhancements of
  the blue wing of Balmer lines can provide clues for investigating mass
  ejections from flares (stellar CMEs) (cf. Vida et al. 2016&amp;2019),
  but this is still very controversial. Thus, we need more flare
  spectroscopic observations with high time resolution for understanding
  how superflares occur and how large mass ejections occur during
  superflares occur. The latter is helpful for estimating the impacts
  on planets from superflares. We have conducted several simultaneous
  spectroscopic and photometric observations of M-dwarf flare stars. In
  2019 January, we observed a M-dwarf flare star YZCMi using APO3.5m/ARCES
  (high-dispersion spectroscopy), APO/ARCSAT0.5m (multi-color photometry),
  TESS (space high-precision single-color photometry), and NICER (soft
  X-ray telescope on ISS). During the observation, we detected large
  enhancements of chromospheric lines lasting for longer than 3 hours
  (e.g., H- alpha and H-beta). H-alpha line profiles during this event
  show some blue asymmetries. In this event, we also detected soft
  X-ray intensity increases, but a bit strangely and a bit different
  from previous expectations, the photometric data (optical continuum
  white light data) show no clear flare-like brightness increases. This
  might suggest that these intensity increases of chromospheric lines
  (with possible blue asymmetries) and soft X-rays occurred as a
  "non white-light" flare events, which are often seen in the case of
  solar flares (e.g., Watanabe et al. 2017). We also observed another
  M-dwarf flare star AU Mic using CTIO/SMART1.5m/CHIRON (high-dispersion
  spectroscopy), LCO (U&amp;V-band photometry), and XMM-Newton (soft
  X-ray), and detected several flares in Oct 2018. In contrast to the
  above "non-white light" events, these flares show enhancements in
  Balmer lines (e.g., H-alpha), optical continuum white light, and soft
  X-ray. Then this event is a so-called "white-light" flare. Moreover,
  this "white-light" event does not show clear blue asymmetries, which are
  different from the above YZCMi "non-white light" event. In this poster,
  we introduce ongoing results on the analyses of these two events.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Coronal dimming as a proxy for stellar coronal mass ejections
Authors: Jin, M.; Cheung, M. C. M.; DeRosa, M. L.; Nitta, N. V.;
   Schrijver, C. J.; France, K.; Kowalski, A.; Mason, J. P.; Osten, R.
2020IAUS..354..426J    Altcode: 2020arXiv200206249J
  Solar coronal dimmings have been observed extensively in the past
  two decades and are believed to have close association with coronal
  mass ejections (CMEs). Recent study found that coronal dimming
  is the only signature that could differentiate powerful flares
  that have CMEs from those that do not. Therefore, dimming might be
  one of the best candidates to observe the stellar CMEs on distant
  Sun-like stars. In this study, we investigate the possibility of using
  coronal dimming as a proxy to diagnose stellar CMEs. By simulating a
  realistic solar CME event and corresponding coronal dimming using a
  global magnetohydrodynamics model (AWSoM: Alfvén-wave Solar Model),
  we first demonstrate the capability of the model to reproduce solar
  observations. We then extend the model for simulating stellar CMEs
  by modifying the input magnetic flux density as well as the initial
  magnetic energy of the CME flux rope. Our result suggests that with
  improved instrument sensitivity, it is possible to detect the coronal
  dimming signals induced by the stellar CMEs.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Measuring Decay Timescales of Downflows in Solar Flare
Footpoints: Testing the 1-minute Theory
Authors: Beltzer-Sweeney, A. K.; Butler, E.; Kowalski, A. F.;
   Cauzzi, G.
2019AGUFMSH13D3423B    Altcode:
  In 1989 George Fisher found analytically that chromospheric downflows in
  flare footprints should slow down to background detection levels within
  ~1 minute regardless of the initial energy injected. <P />We set to test
  this theory by measuring downflows in flare kernels that were observed
  by the IRIS satellite between 2014-2017. The GOES classification system
  was used as a proxy for the energy of the nonthermal electron beam
  that is thought to heat the flare footprint. The redshift evolution
  of a Mg II triplet line was measured in twenty-six C, M, and X class
  flares to determine the timescale of deceleration of the chromospheric
  plasma in response to explosive flare heating. Two different methods
  for measuring the decay of the redshift as a function of time, bisector
  and gaussian, were used to test the robustness of the inferred downflow
  gas velocities across the wide variety of flares. <P />Results of the
  analysis show that downflow velocities reached 30~50 km/s, which is
  consistent with previous results with a derived Mach number of 4~5. The
  times of half-maximum velocity were found to be between 15~30 seconds,
  indicating a rapid slowing. At later times, the Mg II line profiles
  exhibit prolonged redshifts with inferred speeds of 5-7 km/s.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Identification of Stellar Flares Using Differential Evolution
    Template Optimization
Authors: Lawson, Kellen D.; Wisniewski, John P.; Bellm, Eric C.;
   Kowalski, Adam F.; Shupe, David L.
2019AJ....158..119L    Altcode: 2019arXiv190303240L
  We explore methods for the identification of stellar flare events
  in irregularly sampled data of ground-based time domain surveys. In
  particular, we describe a new technique for identifying flaring stars,
  which we have implemented in a publicly available Python module called
  “PyVAN.” The approach uses the Differential Evolution algorithm to
  optimize parameters of empirically derived light curve templates for
  different types of stars to fit a candidate light curve. The difference
  of the likelihoods that these best-fit templates produced the observed
  data is then used to delineate targets that are well-explained by a
  flare template but simultaneously poorly explained by templates of
  common contaminants. By testing on light curves of known identity
  and morphology, we show that our technique is capable of recovering
  flaring status in 69% of all light curves containing a flare event above
  thresholds drawn to include &lt;1% of any contaminant population. By
  applying to Palomar Transient Factory data, we show consistency with
  prior samples of flaring stars, and identify a small selection of
  candidate flaring G-type stars for possible follow-up.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: STROBE-X: X-ray Timing and Spectroscopy on Dynamical Timescales
    from Microseconds to Years
Authors: Ray, Paul; Arzoumanian, Zaven; Ballantyne, David; Bozzo,
   Enrico; Brandt, Soren; Brenneman, Laura; Chakrabarty, Deepto;
   Christophersen, Marc; DeRosa, Alessandra; Feroci, Marco; Gendreau,
   Keith; Goldstein, Adam; Hartmann, Dieter; Hernanz, Margarita; Jenke,
   Peter; Kara, Erin; Maccarone, Tom; McDonald, Michael; Martindale,
   Adrian; Nowak, Michael; Phlips, Bernard; Remillard, Ron; Schanne,
   Stephane; Stevens, Abigail; Tomsick, John; Watts, Anna; Wilson-Hodge,
   Colleen; Wolff, Michael; Wood, Kent; Zane, Silvia; Ajello, Marco;
   Alston, Will; Altamirano, Diego; Antoniou, Vallia; Arur, Kavitha;
   Ashton, Dominic; Auchettl, Katie; Ayres, Tom; Bachetti, Matteo;
   Balokovic, Mislav; Baring, Matthew; Baykal, Altan; Begelman, Mitch;
   Bhat, Narayana; Bogdanov, Slavko; Briggs, Michael; Bulbul, Esra;
   Bult, Petrus; Burns, Eric; Cackett, Ed; Campana, Riccardo; Caspi,
   Amir; Cavecchi, Yuri; Chenevez, Jerome; Cherry, Mike; Corbet, Robin;
   Corcoran, Michael; Corsi, Alessandra; Degenaar, Nathalie; Drake,
   Jeremy; Eikenberry, Steve; Enoto, Teruaki; Fragile, Chris; Fuerst,
   Felix; Gandhi, Poshak; Garcia, Javier; Goldstein, Adam; Gonzalez,
   Anthony; Grefenstette, Brian; Grinberg, Victoria; Grossan, Bruce;
   Guillot, Sebastien; Guver, Tolga; Haggard, Daryl; Heinke, Craig;
   Heinz, Sebastian; Hemphill, Paul; Homan, Jeroen; Hui, Michelle;
   Huppenkothen, Daniela; Ingram, Adam; Irwin, Jimmy; Jaisawal, Gaurava;
   Jaodand, Amruta; Kalemci, Emrah; Kaplan, David; Keek, Laurens; Kennea,
   Jamie; Kerr, Matthew; van der Klis, Michiel; Kocevski, Daniel; Koss,
   Mike; Kowalski, Adam; Lai, Dong; Lamb, Fred; Laycock, Silas; Lazio,
   Joseph; Lazzati, Davide; Longcope, Dana; Loewenstein, Michael; Maitra,
   Dipankair; Majid, Walid; Maksym, W. Peter; Malacaria, Christian;
   Margutti, Raffaella; Martindale, Adrian; McHardy, Ian; Meyer, Manuel;
   Middleton, Matt; Miller, Jon; Miller, Cole; Motta, Sara; Neilsen, Joey;
   Nelson, Tommy; Noble, Scott; O'Brien, Paul; Osborne, Julian; Osten,
   Rachel; Ozel, Feryal; Palliyaguru, Nipuni; Pasham, Dheeraj; Patruno,
   Alessandro; Pelassa, Vero; Petropoulou, Maria; Pilia, Maura; Pohl,
   Martin; Pooley, David; Prescod-Weinstein, Chanda; Psaltis, Dimitrios;
   Raaijmakers, Geert; Reynolds, Chris; Riley, Thomas E.; Salvesen, Greg;
   Santangelo, Andrea; Scaringi, Simone; Schanne, Stephane; Schnittman,
   Jeremy; Smith, David; Smith, Krista Lynne; Snios, Bradford; Steiner,
   Andrew; Steiner, Jack; Stella, Luigi; Strohmayer, Tod; Sun, Ming;
   Tauris, Thomas; Taylor, Corbin; Tohuvavohu, Aaron; Vacchi, Andrea;
   Vasilopoulos, Georgios; Veledina, Alexandra; Walsh, Jonelle; Weinberg,
   Nevin; Wilkins, Dan; Willingale, Richard; Wilms, Joern; Winter,
   Lisa; Wolff, Michael; in 't Zand, Jean; Zezas, Andreas; Zhang, Bing;
   Zoghbi, Abdu
2019BAAS...51g.231R    Altcode: 2019astro2020U.231R
  STROBE-X is a probe-class mission concept, selected for study by NASA,
  for X-ray spectral timing of compact objects across the mass scale. It
  combines huge collecting area, high throughput, broad energy coverage,
  and excellent spectral and temporal resolution in a single facility,
  enabling a broad portfolio of high-priority astrophysics.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High-fidelity Imaging of the Inner AU Mic Debris Disk:
    Evidence of Differential Wind Sculpting?
Authors: Wisniewski, John P.; Kowalski, Adam F.; Davenport, James
   R. A.; Schneider, Glenn; Grady, Carol A.; Hebb, Leslie; Lawson, Kellen
   D.; Augereau, Jean-Charles; Boccaletti, Anthony; Brown, Alexander;
   Debes, John H.; Gaspar, Andras; Henning, Thomas K.; Hines, Dean C.;
   Kuchner, Marc J.; Lagrange, Anne-Marie; Milli, Julien; Sezestre,
   Elie; Stark, Christopher C.; Thalmann, Christian
2019ApJ...883L...8W    Altcode: 2019arXiv190710113W
  We present new high-fidelity optical coronagraphic imagery of the inner
  ∼50 au of AU Mic’s edge-on debris disk using the BAR5 occulter of
  the Hubble Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (HST/STIS) obtained on
  2018 July 26-27. This new imagery reveals that “feature A,” residing
  at a projected stellocentric separation of 14.2 au on the southeast side
  of the disk, exhibits an apparent “loop-like” morphology at the time
  of our observations. The loop has a projected width of 1.5 au and rises
  2.3 au above the disk midplane. We also explored Transiting Exoplanet
  Survey Satellite photometric observations of AU Mic that are consistent
  with evidence of two starspot complexes in the system. The likely
  co-alignment of the stellar and disk rotational axes breaks degeneracies
  in detailed spot modeling, indicating that AU Mic’s projected magnetic
  field axis is offset from its rotational axis. We speculate that small
  grains in AU Mic’s disk could be sculpted by a time-dependent wind
  that is influenced by this offset magnetic field axis, analogous to
  co-rotating solar interaction regions that sculpt and influence the
  inner and outer regions of our own Heliosphere. Alternatively, if the
  observed spot modulation is indicative of a significant misalignment
  of the stellar and disk rotational axes, we suggest that the disk
  could still be sculpted by the differential equatorial versus polar
  wind that it sees with every stellar rotation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Measurements of the Ultraviolet Spectral Characteristics of
    Low-mass Exoplanetary Systems (Mega-MUSCLES)
Authors: Wilson, David John; Froning, Cynthia; France, Kevin;
   Youngblood, Allison; Duvvuri, Girish M.; Brown, Alexander; Schneider,
   P. Christian; Kowalski, Adam; Loyd, R. O. Parke; Berta-Thompson,
   Zachory Berta-; Pineda, J. Sebastian; Linsky, Jeffrey; Rugheimer,
   Sarah; Newton, Elizabeth; Miguel, Yamila; Roberge, Aki; Buccino,
   Andrea P.; Irwin, Jonathan; Kaltenegger, Lisa; Vieytes, Mariela;
   Mauas, Pablo; Redfield, Seth; Hawley, Suzanne; Tian, Feng
2019ESS.....431906W    Altcode:
  M dwarf stars have emerged as ideal targets for exoplanet
  observations. Their small radii aids planetary discovery, their
  close-in habitable zones allow short observing campaigns, and their
  red spectra provide opportunities for transit spectroscopy with
  JWST. The potential of M dwarfs has been underlined by the discovery
  of remarkable systems such as the seven Earth-sized planets orbiting
  TRAPPIST-1 and the habitable-zone planet around the closest star to
  the Sun. <P />However, to accurately assess the conditions in these
  systems requires a firm understanding of how M dwarfs differ from the
  Sun, beyond just their smaller size and mass. Of particular importance
  are the time-variable, high-energy ultraviolet and x-ray regions of
  the M dwarf spectral energy distribution (SED), which can influence
  the chemistry and lifetime of exoplanet atmospheres, as well as their
  surface radiation environments. <P />The Measurements of the Ultraviolet
  Spectral Characteristics of Low-mass Exoplanetary Systems (Mega-MUSCLES)
  Treasury project, together with the precursor MUSCLES project, aims to
  produce full SEDs of a representative sample of M dwarfs, covering a
  wide range of stellar mass, age, and planetary system architecture. We
  have obtained x-ray and ultraviolet data for 13 stars using the Hubble,
  Chandra and XMM space telescopes, along with ground-based data in the
  optical and state-of-the-art DEM modelling to fill in the unobservable
  extreme ultraviolet regions. Our completed SEDs will be available as a
  community resource, with the aim that a close MUSCLES analogue should
  exist for most M dwarfs of interest. <P />In this presentation I will
  overview the Mega-MUSCLES project, describing our choice of targets,
  observation strategy and SED production methodology. I will also
  discuss notable targets such as the TRAPPIST-1 host star, comparing
  our observations with previous data and model predictions. Finally,
  I will present an exciting by-product of the Mega-MUSCLES project:
  time-resolved ultraviolet spectroscopy of stellar flares at multiple
  targets, spanning a range of stellar types, ages and flare energies.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Modeling Mg II h, k and Triplet Lines at Solar Flare Ribbons
Authors: Zhu, Yingjie; Kowalski, Adam F.; Tian, Hui; Uitenbroek, Han;
   Carlsson, Mats; Allred, Joel C.
2019ApJ...879...19Z    Altcode: 2019arXiv190412285Z
  Observations from the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph often
  reveal significantly broadened and non-reversed profiles of the Mg II
  h, k and triplet lines at flare ribbons. To understand the formation
  of these optically thick Mg II lines, we perform plane-parallel
  radiative hydrodynamics modeling with the RADYN code, and then
  recalculate the Mg II line profiles from RADYN atmosphere snapshots
  using the radiative transfer code RH. We find that the current RH
  code significantly underestimates the Mg II h and k Stark widths. By
  implementing semiclassical perturbation approximation results of
  quadratic Stark broadening from the STARK-B database in the RH code,
  the Stark broadenings are found to be one order of magnitude larger
  than those calculated from the current RH code. However, the improved
  Stark widths are still too small, and another factor of 30 has to be
  multiplied to reproduce the significantly broadened lines and adjacent
  continuum seen in observations. Nonthermal electrons, magnetic fields,
  three-dimensional effects, or electron density effects may account
  for this factor. Without modifying the RADYN atmosphere, we have also
  reproduced non-reversed Mg II h and k profiles, which appear when the
  electron beam energy flux is decreasing. These profiles are formed at
  an electron density of ∼8 × 10<SUP>14</SUP> cm<SUP>-3</SUP> and a
  temperature of ∼1.4 × 10<SUP>4</SUP> K, where the source function
  slightly deviates from the Planck function. Our investigation also
  demonstrates that at flare ribbons the triplet lines are formed in the
  upper chromosphere, close to the formation heights of the h and k lines.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Focusing Optics X-ray Solar Imager (FOXSI)
Authors: Christe, Steven; Shih, Albert Y.; Krucker, Sam; Glesener,
   Lindsay; Saint-Hilaire, Pascal; Caspi, Amir; Gburek, Szymon;
   Steslicki, Marek; Allred, Joel C.; Battaglia, Marina; Baumgartner,
   Wayne H.; Drake, James; Goetz, Keith; Grefenstette, Brian; Hannah,
   Iain; Holman, Gordon D.; Inglis, Andrew; Ireland, Jack; Klimchuk,
   James A.; Ishikawa, Shin-Nosuke; Kontar, Eduard; Massone, Anna-maria;
   Piana, Michele; Ramsey, Brian; Schwartz, Richard A.; Woods, Thomas N.;
   Chen, Bin; Gary, Dale E.; Hudson, Hugh S.; Kowalski, Adam; Warmuth,
   Alexander; White, Stephen M.; Veronig, Astrid; Vilmer, Nicole
2019AAS...23422501C    Altcode:
  The Focusing Optics X-ray Solar Imager (FOXSI), a SMEX mission concept
  in Phase A, is the first-ever solar-dedicated, direct-imaging, hard
  X-ray telescope. FOXSI provides a revolutionary new approach to
  viewing explosive magnetic-energy release on the Sun by detecting
  signatures of accelerated electrons and hot plasma directly in
  and near the energy-release sites of solar eruptive events (e.g.,
  solar flares). FOXSI's primary science objective is to understand the
  mystery of how impulsive energy release leads to solar eruptions, the
  primary drivers of space weather at Earth, and how those eruptions are
  energized and evolve. FOXSI addresses three important science questions:
  (1) How are particles accelerated at the Sun? (2) How do solar plasmas
  get heated to high temperatures? (3) How does magnetic energy released
  on the Sun lead to flares and eruptions? These fundamental physics
  questions are key to our understanding of phenomena throughout
  the Universe from planetary magnetospheres to black hole accretion
  disks. FOXSI measures the energy distributions and spatial structure of
  accelerated electrons throughout solar eruptive events for the first
  time by directly focusing hard X-rays from the Sun. This naturally
  enables high imaging dynamic range, while previous instruments have
  typically been blinded by bright emission. FOXSI provides 20-100 times
  more sensitivity as well as 20 times faster imaging spectroscopy
  than previously available, probing physically relevant timescales
  (&lt;1 second) never before accessible. FOXSI's launch in July 2022
  is aligned with the peak of the 11-year solar cycle, enabling FOXSI
  to observe the many large solar eruptions that are expected to take
  place throughout its two-year mission.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Spectral Evidence for Heating at Large Column Mass in Umbral
    Solar Flare Kernels. I. IRIS Near-UV Spectra of the X1 Solar Flare
    of 2014 October 25
Authors: Kowalski, Adam F.; Butler, Elizabeth; Daw, Adrian N.;
   Fletcher, Lyndsay; Allred, Joel C.; De Pontieu, Bart; Kerr, Graham S.;
   Cauzzi, Gianna
2019ApJ...878..135K    Altcode: 2019arXiv190502111K
  The GOES X1 flare SOL2014-10-25T17:08:00 was a three-ribbon solar
  flare observed with the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS)
  in the near-UV (NUV) and far-UV. One of the flare ribbons crossed
  a sunspot umbra, producing a dramatic, ∼1000% increase in the NUV
  continuum radiation. We comprehensively analyze the UV spectral data
  of the umbral flare brightenings, which provide new challenges for
  radiative-hydrodynamic modeling of the chromospheric velocity field and
  the white-light continuum radiation. The emission line profiles in the
  umbral flare brightenings exhibit redshifts and profile asymmetries,
  but these are significantly smaller than in another, well-studied
  X-class solar flare. We present a ratio of the NUV continuum intensity
  to the Fe II λ2814.45 intensity. This continuum-to-line ratio is a
  new spectral diagnostic of significant heating at high column mass
  (log m/[g cm<SUP>-2</SUP>] &gt; -2) during solar flares because the
  continuum and emission line radiation originate from relatively similar
  temperatures but moderately different optical depths. The full spectral
  readout of these IRIS data also allow for a comprehensive survey of the
  flaring NUV landscape: in addition to many lines of Fe II and Cr II, we
  identify a new solar flare emission line, He I λ2829.91 (as previously
  identified in laboratory and early-type stellar spectra). The Fermi/GBM
  hard X-ray data provide inputs to radiative-hydrodynamic models (which
  will be presented in Paper II) in order to better understand the large
  continuum-to-line ratios, the origin of the white-light continuum
  radiation, and the role of electron beam heating in the low atmosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High Resolution Observations of Chromospheric Condensation
Authors: Cauzzi, Gianna; Graham, David; Zangrilli, Luca; Kowalski, Adam
2019shin.confE.180C    Altcode:
  The chromospheric response to flaring can provide information on
  the coronal magnetic reconnection processes driving the flare. In
  particular, the evolution of the chromospheric condensation can
  trace the site and size of episodes of energy release in the corona,
  and inform on their duration. High resolution, spectrally resolved
  observations of chromospheric lines and continua are necessary to fully
  study this phenomenon. <P />High cadence observations of chromospheric
  condensation in small flaring kernels, derived from a multi-spectral
  analysis of IRIS UV lines in a well-studied X1 flare, put some hard
  constraints on these values. In particular, it is found that the
  chromospheric signatures occurr sequentially in multiple distinct
  positions, separated by only 0.3"

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: EUV observations of cool dwarf stars
Authors: Youngblood, Allison; Drake, Jeremy; Mason, James; Osten,
   Rachel; Jin, Meng; Kowalski, Adam; France, Kevin; Fleming, Brian;
   Allred, Joel; Amerstorfer, Ute; Berta-Thompson, Zachory; Bourrier,
   Vincent; Fossati, Luca; Froning, Cynthia; Garraffo, Cecilia; Gronoff,
   Guillaume; Koskinen, Tommi; Lichtenegger, Herbert
2019BAAS...51c.300Y    Altcode: 2019astro2020T.300Y; 2019arXiv190305719Y
  The EUV (100-912 Å) probes regions of the stellar atmosphere that
  are inaccessible from other spectral regions, including cool coronal
  emission lines that offer the clearest path toward detecting coronal
  mass ejections on stars other than the Sun. New EUV observations would
  require a dedicated grazing-incidence observatory.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: EUV influences on exoplanet atmospheric stability and evolution
Authors: Youngblood, Allison; France, Kevin; Koskinen, Tommi; Fossati,
   Luca; Amerstorfer, Ute; Lichtenegger, Herbert; Drake, Jeremy; Mason,
   James; Fleming, Brian; Allred, Joel; Berta-Thompson, Zachory; Bourrier,
   Vincent; Froning, Cynthia; Garraffo, Cecilia; Gronoff, Guillaume;
   Jin, Meng; Kowalski, Adam; Osten, Rachel
2019BAAS...51c.320Y    Altcode: 2019astro2020T.320Y; 2019arXiv190305718Y
  EUV photons (100-912 Å) drive atmospheric mass loss, and an accurate
  accounting of the EUV in a planet's energy budget is essential. Direct
  EUV observations of exoplanet host stars would require a new, dedicated
  observatory. Archival observations from EUVE and models are insufficient
  to accurately characterize EUV spectra of exoplanet host stars.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Developing a vision for exoplanetary transit spectroscopy:
    a shared window on the analysis of planetary atmospheres and of
    stellar magnetic structure
Authors: Kowalski, Adam; Schrijver, Karel; Pillet, Valentin; Criscuoli,
   Serena
2019BAAS...51c.149K    Altcode: 2019astro2020T.149K; 2019arXiv190405976K
  We describe how accurate exoplanet atmospheres' characterization will
  inevitably require taking into consideration stellar inhomogeneities
  caused by convection and magnetic fields. Disentangling these two
  components requires a multipronged approach with new solar reference
  spectra, MHD modeling, and collaborations among astrophysics
  communities.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: STROBE-X: X-ray Timing and Spectroscopy on Dynamical Timescales
    from Microseconds to Years
Authors: Ray, Paul S.; Arzoumanian, Zaven; Ballantyne, David;
   Bozzo, Enrico; Brandt, Soren; Brenneman, Laura; Chakrabarty, Deepto;
   Christophersen, Marc; DeRosa, Alessandra; Feroci, Marco; Gendreau,
   Keith; Goldstein, Adam; Hartmann, Dieter; Hernanz, Margarita;
   Jenke, Peter; Kara, Erin; Maccarone, Tom; McDonald, Michael;
   Nowak, Michael; Phlips, Bernard; Remillard, Ron; Stevens, Abigail;
   Tomsick, John; Watts, Anna; Wilson-Hodge, Colleen; Wood, Kent; Zane,
   Silvia; Ajello, Marco; Alston, Will; Altamirano, Diego; Antoniou,
   Vallia; Arur, Kavitha; Ashton, Dominic; Auchettl, Katie; Ayres, Tom;
   Bachetti, Matteo; Balokovic, Mislav; Baring, Matthew; Baykal, Altan;
   Begelman, Mitch; Bhat, Narayana; Bogdanov, Slavko; Briggs, Michael;
   Bulbul, Esra; Bult, Petrus; Burns, Eric; Cackett, Ed; Campana,
   Riccardo; Caspi, Amir; Cavecchi, Yuri; Chenevez, Jerome; Cherry,
   Mike; Corbet, Robin; Corcoran, Michael; Corsi, Alessandra; Degenaar,
   Nathalie; Drake, Jeremy; Eikenberry, Steve; Enoto, Teruaki; Fragile,
   Chris; Fuerst, Felix; Gandhi, Poshak; Garcia, Javier; Goldstein,
   Adam; Gonzalez, Anthony; Grefenstette, Brian; Grinberg, Victoria;
   Grossan, Bruce; Guillot, Sebastien; Guver, Tolga; Haggard, Daryl;
   Heinke, Craig; Heinz, Sebastian; Hemphill, Paul; Homan, Jeroen;
   Hui, Michelle; Huppenkothen, Daniela; Ingram, Adam; Irwin, Jimmy;
   Jaisawal, Gaurava; Jaodand, Amruta; Kalemci, Emrah; Kaplan, David;
   Keek, Laurens; Kennea, Jamie; Kerr, Matthew; van der Klis, Michiel;
   Kocevski, Daniel; Koss, Mike; Kowalski, Adam; Lai, Dong; Lamb, Fred;
   Laycock, Silas; Lazio, Joseph; Lazzati, Davide; Longcope, Dana;
   Loewenstein, Michael; Maitra, Dipankair; Majid, Walid; Maksym,
   W. Peter; Malacaria, Christian; Margutti, Raffaella; Martindale,
   Adrian; McHardy, Ian; Meyer, Manuel; Middleton, Matt; Miller, Jon;
   Miller, Cole; Motta, Sara; Neilsen, Joey; Nelson, Tommy; Noble,
   Scott; O'Brien, Paul; Osborne, Julian; Osten, Rachel; Ozel, Feryal;
   Palliyaguru, Nipuni; Pasham, Dheeraj; Patruno, Alessandro; Pelassa,
   Vero; Petropoulou, Maria; Pilia, Maura; Pohl, Martin; Pooley, David;
   Prescod-Weinstein, Chanda; Psaltis, Dimitrios; Raaijmakers, Geert;
   Reynolds, Chris; Riley, Thomas E.; Salvesen, Greg; Santangelo, Andrea;
   Scaringi, Simone; Schanne, Stephane; Schnittman, Jeremy; Smith, David;
   Smith, Krista Lynne; Snios, Bradford; Steiner, Andrew; Steiner, Jack;
   Stella, Luigi; Strohmayer, Tod; Sun, Ming; Tauris, Thomas; Taylor,
   Corbin; Tohuvavohu, Aaron; Vacchi, Andrea; Vasilopoulos, Georgios;
   Veledina, Alexandra; Walsh, Jonelle; Weinberg, Nevin; Wilkins, Dan;
   Willingale, Richard; Wilms, Joern; Winter, Lisa; Wolff, Michael; in
   't Zand, Jean; Zezas, Andreas; Zhang, Bing; Zoghbi, Abdu
2019arXiv190303035R    Altcode:
  We present the Spectroscopic Time-Resolving Observatory for Broadband
  Energy X-rays (STROBE-X), a probe-class mission concept selected for
  study by NASA. It combines huge collecting area, high throughput, broad
  energy coverage, and excellent spectral and temporal resolution in a
  single facility. STROBE-X offers an enormous increase in sensitivity
  for X-ray spectral timing, extending these techniques to extragalactic
  targets for the first time. It is also an agile mission capable of
  rapid response to transient events, making it an essential X-ray
  partner facility in the era of time-domain, multi-wavelength, and
  multi-messenger astronomy. Optimized for study of the most extreme
  conditions found in the Universe, its key science objectives include:
  (1) Robustly measuring mass and spin and mapping inner accretion
  flows across the black hole mass spectrum, from compact stars to
  intermediate-mass objects to active galactic nuclei. (2) Mapping out
  the full mass-radius relation of neutron stars using an ensemble of
  nearly two dozen rotation-powered pulsars and accreting neutron stars,
  and hence measuring the equation of state for ultradense matter
  over a much wider range of densities than explored by NICER. (3)
  Identifying and studying X-ray counterparts (in the post-Swift era)
  for multiwavelength and multi-messenger transients in the dynamic sky
  through cross-correlation with gravitational wave interferometers,
  neutrino observatories, and high-cadence time-domain surveys in other
  electromagnetic bands. (4) Continuously surveying the dynamic X-ray
  sky with a large duty cycle and high time resolution to characterize
  the behavior of X-ray sources over an unprecedentedly vast range of
  time scales. STROBE-X's formidable capabilities will also enable a
  broad portfolio of additional science.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A Hot Ultraviolet Flare on the M Dwarf Star GJ 674
Authors: Froning, Cynthia S.; Kowalski, Adam; France, Kevin; Loyd,
   R. O. Parke; Schneider, P. Christian; Youngblood, Allison; Wilson,
   David; Brown, Alexander; Berta-Thompson, Zachory; Pineda, J. Sebastian;
   Linsky, Jeffrey; Rugheimer, Sarah; Miguel, Yamila
2019ApJ...871L..26F    Altcode:
  As part of the Mega-Measurements of the Ultraviolet Spectral
  Characteristics of Low-Mass Exoplanetary Systems Hubble Space Telescope
  (HST) Treasury program, we obtained time-series ultraviolet spectroscopy
  of the M2.5V star, GJ 674. During the far-ultraviolet (FUV) monitoring
  observations, the target exhibited several small flares and one large
  flare (E <SUB>FUV</SUB> = 10<SUP>30.75</SUP> erg) that persisted
  over the entirety of an HST orbit and had an equivalent duration
  &gt;30,000 s, comparable to the highest relative amplitude event
  previously recorded in the FUV. The flare spectrum exhibited enhanced
  line emission from chromospheric, transition region, and coronal
  transitions and a blue FUV continuum with an unprecedented color
  temperature of T<SUB>C</SUB> ≃ 40,000 ± 10,000 K. In this Letter,
  we compare the flare FUV continuum emission with parameterizations of
  radiative hydrodynamic model atmospheres of M star flares. We find that
  the observed flare continuum can be reproduced using flare models but
  only with the ad hoc addition of a hot, dense emitting component. This
  observation demonstrates that flares with hot FUV continuum temperatures
  and significant extreme-ultraviolet/FUV energy deposition will continue
  to be of importance to exoplanet atmospheric chemistry and heating, even
  as the host M dwarfs age beyond their most active evolutionary phases.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Near-ultraviolet Continuum Radiation in the Impulsive
    Phase of HF/GF-type dMe Flares. I. Data
Authors: Kowalski, Adam F.; Wisniewski, John P.; Hawley, Suzanne L.;
   Osten, Rachel A.; Brown, Alexander; Fariña, Cecilia; Valenti, Jeff
   A.; Brown, Stephen; Xilouris, Manolis; Schmidt, Sarah J.; Johns-Krull,
   Christopher
2019ApJ...871..167K    Altcode: 2018arXiv181104021K
  We present near-UV (NUV) flare spectra from the Hubble Space Telescope
  (HST)/Cosmic Origins Spectrograph during two moderate-amplitude
  U-band flares on the dM4e star GJ 1243. These spectra are some of
  the first accurately flux-calibrated, NUV flare spectra obtained
  over the impulsive phase in M dwarf flares. We observed these flares
  with a fleet of nine ground-based telescopes simultaneously, which
  provided broadband photometry and low-resolution spectra at the
  Balmer jump. An increase in the broadband continuum occurred with a
  signal-to-noise ratio &gt;20 in the HST spectra, while numerous Fe
  II lines and the Mg II lines also increased but with smaller flux
  enhancements than the continuum radiation. These two events produced
  the most prominent Balmer line radiation and the largest Balmer jumps
  that have been observed to date in dMe flare spectra. A T = 9000 K
  blackbody underestimates the NUV continuum flare flux by a factor of
  two and is a poor approximation to the white light in these types of
  flare events. Instead, our data suggest that the peak of the specific
  continuum flux density is constrained to U-band wavelengths near the
  Balmer series limit. A radiative-hydrodynamic simulation of a very
  high energy deposition rate averaged over times of impulsive heating
  and cooling better explains the properties of the λ &gt; 2500 Å
  flare continuum. These two events sample only one end of the empirical
  color-color distribution for dMe flares, and more time-resolved flare
  spectra in the NUV, U band, and optical from 2000 to 4200 Å are needed
  during more impulsive and/or more energetic flares.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Ultraviolet Properties of a Large Flare on GJ 674
Authors: Froning, Cynthia S.; Kowalski, Adam; France, Kevin; Loyd,
   R. P.; Youngblood, Allison; Schneider, Christian; Wilson, David;
   Rugheimer, Sarah
2019AAS...23311401F    Altcode:
  As part of the Mega-MUSCLES HST Treasury Program, our team observed the
  exoplanet host star, GJ 674, in April of 2018. During seven orbits of
  HST ultraviolet spectroscopic observations with COS and STIS, GJ 674
  exhibited several small flares and two large ones, the most energetic
  of which persisted over the entire COS orbit and has an integrated
  FUV (1070-1360A) flux of 10^30.8 erg. The flare spectrum exhibits
  line emission from tracers of the stellar chromosphere (CII, CIII,
  SiII, SiIII, SiIV, NV) and corona (Fe XII, FE XIX, Fe XXI). The flare
  spectrum is also distinguished by strong, blue continuum emission
  which can be fit by a blackbody with a brightness temperature of
  Tbr = 40,000+/-10,000 K. In this presentation, we compare the flare
  UV properties to parameterizations of RHD models of chromospheric
  condensations and show how the flare constrains electron heating
  values and the development of flare layers in the chromospheres of M
  dwarf stars.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A 7-Day, Multiwavelength Flare Monitoring Campaign on AU Mic
Authors: Kowalski, Adam F.; Allred, Joel; Axelson, Roy; Brown,
   Alexander; Carter, Brad; Grady, C. A.; Henry, Todd; Hinojosa, Rodrigo;
   Jao, Wei-Chun; Lomax, Jamie L.; Neff, James E.; Osten, Rachel; Paredes,
   Leonardo; Soutter, Jack; Schneider, Glenn; Vrijmoet, Eliot H.; White,
   Graeme; Wisniewski, John
2019AAS...23336014K    Altcode:
  M dwarf flares exhibit a strong response in the X-ray and NUV, in line
  with the standard Neupert effect observed in ~80% of (less energetic)
  solar flares. However, some stellar flares produce only bright X-rays
  and others only a bright NUV response. The detailed properties and
  causes of each of these types of flares are not well constrained
  because the vast majority of data of M dwarf flares in the past have
  been in the optical without information at other wavelengths. Our
  fundamental understanding of stellar flares has been hampered by
  a lack of a large multi-wavelength dataset covering many types of
  flares (Neupert vs. non-Neupert). We present first results from a
  large flare campaign over ~7 days (Oct 10 - Oct 17, 2018) in which we
  characterize AU Mic's flaring properties at X-ray, UV, optical, and
  radio wavelengths. AU Mic is the brightest M dwarf flare star in the
  sky, has a well-constrained (young) age, and is known to produce very
  energetic flares on occasion. The flare monitoring was done with a large
  fleet of ground and spaced-based observatories, including XMM-Newton,
  Swift, the VLA, the ATCA, the SMARTS 0.9m and 1.5m telescopes at CTIO,
  MINERVA-Australis, the ARC 3.5m at APO, and several sites in the LCO
  Global Telescope Network. In each wavelength regime, we have devised
  and made new measurements to probe the physics of flaring atmospheres
  from the photosphere and/or low chromosphere through the corona. We show
  how these data provide new constraints on radiative-hydrodynamic flare
  models, and we discuss implications for the space weather in the system.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A Hot Ultraviolet Flare on the M Dwarf Star GJ 674
Authors: Froning, C. S.; Kowalski, A.; France, K.; Loyd, R. O. Parke;
   Schneider, P. Christian; Youngblood, A.; Wilson, D.; Brown, A.;
   Berta-Thompson, Z.; Pineda, J. Sebastian; Linsky, J.; Rugheimer, S.;
   Miguel, Y.
2019arXiv190108647F    Altcode:
  As part of the Mega MUSCLES Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Treasury
  program, we obtained time-series ultraviolet spectroscopy of the
  M2.5V star, GJ~674. During the FUV monitoring observations, the
  target exhibited several small flares and one large flare (E_FUV =
  10^{30.75} ergs) that persisted over the entirety of a HST orbit
  and had an equivalent duration &gt;30,000 sec, comparable to the
  highest relative amplitude event previously recorded in the FUV. The
  flare spectrum exhibited enhanced line emission from chromospheric,
  transition region, and coronal transitions and a blue FUV continuum
  with an unprecedented color temperature of T_c ~ 40,000+/-10,000
  K. In this paper, we compare the flare FUV continuum emission with
  parameterizations of radiative hydrodynamic model atmospheres of M star
  flares. We find that the observed flare continuum can be reproduced
  using flare models but only with the ad hoc addition of hot, dense
  emitting component. This observation demonstrates that flares with hot
  FUV continuum temperatures and significant EUV/FUV energy deposition
  will continue to be of importance to exoplanet atmospheric chemistry
  and heating even as the host M dwarfs age beyond their most active
  evolutionary phases.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Modeling of the Hydrogen Lyman Lines in Solar Flares
Authors: Brown, Stephen A.; Fletcher, Lyndsay; Kerr, Graham S.;
   Labrosse, Nicolas; Kowalski, Adam F.; De La Cruz Rodríguez, Jaime
2018ApJ...862...59B    Altcode: 2018arXiv180703373B
  The hydrogen Lyman lines (91.2 nm &lt; λ &lt; 121.6 nm) are significant
  contributors to the radiative losses of the solar chromosphere, and
  they are enhanced during flares. We have shown previously that the Lyman
  lines observed by the Extreme Ultraviolet Variability instrument onboard
  the Solar Dynamics Observatory exhibit Doppler motions equivalent
  to speeds on the order of 30 km s<SUP>-1</SUP>. However, contrary to
  expectations, both redshifts and blueshifts were present and no dominant
  flow direction was observed. To understand the formation of the Lyman
  lines, particularly their Doppler motions, we have used the radiative
  hydrodynamic code, RADYN, along with the radiative transfer code, RH,
  to simulate the evolution of the flaring chromosphere and the response
  of the Lyman lines during solar flares. We find that upflows in the
  simulated atmospheres lead to blueshifts in the line cores, which
  exhibit central reversals. We then model the effects of the instrument
  on the profiles, using the Extreme Ultraviolet Variability Experiment
  (EVE) instrument's properties. What may be interpreted as downflows
  (redshifted emission) in the lines, after they have been convolved
  with the instrumental line profile, may not necessarily correspond to
  actual downflows. Dynamic features in the atmosphere can introduce
  complex features in the line profiles that will not be detected by
  instruments with the spectral resolution of EVE, but which leave more
  of a signature at the resolution of the Spectral Investigation of the
  Coronal Environment instrument onboard the Solar Orbiter.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Evolution of T = 10,000 K Blackbody-Like Continuum
    Radiation in the Impulsive Phase of dMe Flares
Authors: Kowalski, Adam F.; Mathioudakis, Mihalis; Hawley, Suzanne L.
2018csss.confE..42K    Altcode: 2018arXiv181007226K
  The near-ultraviolet and optical (white-light) continuum radiation
  in M dwarf flares exhibits a range of observed characteristics,
  suggesting that the amount of heating at large optical depth varies
  among impulsive-type and gradual-type flares. Specific flux ratios
  from high-time cadence spectra and narrowband continuum photometry
  have also shown that these characteristics vary from the peak to the
  gradual decay phases of flares. In these proceedings, we present the
  highest-time cadence ( 1 s), highest signal-to-noise ( 100) constraints
  on the optical color temperature evolution during the rise phase of a
  large, impulsive-type dMe flare event. The flare exhibits compelling
  evidence of a hot, color temperature (T 10,000 K), but the Balmer jump
  ratios show that the flare cannot be explained by isothermal slabs or
  blackbody surfaces at any time in the evolution. The new data analysis
  establish these properties as critical challenges for any flare model,
  and we discuss 1D radiative-hydrodynamic modeling that will be compared
  to the evolution of the flare colors in this intriguing event.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: IRIS Ultraviolet Spectral Properties of a Sample of X-Class
    Solar Flares
Authors: Butler, Elizabeth; Kowalski, Adam; Cauzzi, Gianna; Allred,
   Joel C.; Daw, Adrian N.
2018AAS...23212101B    Altcode:
  The white-light (near-ultraviolet (NUV) and optical) continuum emission
  comprises the majority of the radiated energy in solar flares. However,
  there are nearly as many explanations for the origin of the white-light
  continuum radiation as there are white-light flares that have been
  studied in detail with spectra. Furthermore, there are rarely robust
  constraints on the time-resolved dynamics in the white-light emitting
  flare layers. We are conducting a statistical study of the properties of
  Fe II lines, Mg II lines, and NUV continuum intensity in bright flare
  kernels observed by the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS),
  in order to provide comprehensive constraints for radiative-hydrodynamic
  flare models. Here we present a new technique for identifying bright
  flare kernels and preliminary relationships among IRIS spectral
  properties for a sample of X-class solar flares.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A Phenomenological Two-Ribbon Model for Spatially Unresolved
    Observations of Stellar Flares
Authors: Kowalski, Adam
2018AAS...23231702K    Altcode:
  Solar flares and flares that occur in much more magnetically
  active stars share some striking properties, such as the observed
  Neupert effect. However, stellar flares with the most impressive
  multi-wavelength data sets are typically much more energetic
  than solar flares, thus making robust connections difficult to
  establish. Whereas solar data have the advantage of high spatial
  resolution providing critical information about the development
  of flare ribbons, the major advantage of stellar flare data is
  the readily available broad-wavelength coverage of the white-light
  radiation and the Balmer jump spectral region. Due to the lack of
  direct spatial resolution for stellar flares and rarely coverage of
  the Balmer jump region for solar flares, it is not clear how to make
  a direct comparison. I will present a new method for modeling stellar
  flares based on high spatial resolution information of solar flare
  two-ribbon development for comparisons of the physics of their observed
  phenomena, such as the red-wing asymmetries in chromospheric lines and
  the white-light continuum radiation. The new modeling method combines
  aspects of "multi-thread" modeling and 1D radiative-hydrodynamic
  modeling. Our algorithm is important for interpreting the impulsive
  phase of superflares in young G dwarfs in Kepler and understanding
  how hour-long decay timescales are attained in the gradual phase of
  some very energetic stellar flares.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Focusing Optics X-ray Solar Imager (FOXSI)
Authors: Christe, Steven; Shih, Albert Y.; Krucker, Sam; Glesener,
   Lindsay; Saint-Hilaire, Pascal; Caspi, Amir; Allred, Joel C.; Chen,
   Bin; Battaglia, Marina; Drake, James Frederick; Gary, Dale E.; Goetz,
   Keith; Gburek, Szymon; Grefenstette, Brian; Hannah, Iain G.; Holman,
   Gordon; Hudson, Hugh S.; Inglis, Andrew R.; Ireland, Jack; Ishikawa,
   Shin-nosuke; Klimchuk, James A.; Kontar, Eduard; Kowalski, Adam F.;
   Massone, Anna Maria; Piana, Michele; Ramsey, Brian; Schwartz, Richard;
   Steslicki, Marek; Ryan, Daniel; Warmuth, Alexander; Veronig, Astrid;
   Vilmer, Nicole; White, Stephen M.; Woods, Thomas N.
2018tess.conf40444C    Altcode:
  We present FOXSI (Focusing Optics X-ray Solar Imager), a Small Explorer
  (SMEX) Heliophysics mission that is currently undergoing a Phase A
  concept study. FOXSI will provide a revolutionary new perspective on
  energy release and particle acceleration on the Sun. FOXSI's primary
  instrument, the Direct Spectroscopic Imager (DSI), is a direct imaging
  X-ray spectrometer with higher dynamic range and better than 10x the
  sensitivity of previous instruments. Flown on a 3-axis-stabilized
  spacecraft in low-Earth orbit, DSI uses high-angular-resolution
  grazing-incidence focusing optics combined with state-of-the-art
  pixelated solid-state detectors to provide direct imaging of solar hard
  X-rays for the first time. DSI is composed of a pair of X-ray telescopes
  with a 14-meter focal length enabled by a deployable boom. DSI has a
  field of view of 9 arcminutes and an angular resolution of better than 8
  arcsec FWHM; it will cover the energy range from 3 up to 50-70 keV with
  a spectral resolution of better than 1 keV. DSI will measure each photon
  individually and will be able to create useful images at a sub-second
  temporal resolution. FOXSI will also measure soft x-ray emission down
  to 0.8 keV with a 0.25 keV resolution with its secondary instrument,
  the Spectrometer for Temperature and Composition (STC) provided by
  the Polish Academy of Sciences. Making use of an attenuator-wheel and
  high-rate-capable detectors, FOXSI will be able to observe the largest
  flares without saturation while still maintaining the sensitivity to
  detect X-ray emission from weak flares, escaping electrons, and hot
  active regions. This presentation will cover the data products and
  software that can be expected from FOXSI and how they could be used
  by the community.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Origin of White Light Flares: A parameter study of standard
    model solar flare RHD Simulations
Authors: Kerr, Graham Stewart; de Aguiar Simoes, Paulo Jose; Fletcher,
   Lyndsay; Allred, Joel C.; Kowalski, Adam F.
2018tess.conf30490K    Altcode:
  The bulk of the enhanced radiation emitted during solar flares
  originates from the lower atmosphere, making it a crucial region for
  understanding energy and radiation transport during flares. Of the
  radiation emitted from the lower atmosphere a significant contribution
  is from enhancements to the optical continuum (white light flares;
  WLFs). There is still no consensus regarding the emission mechanism
  responsible for WLFs, in part due to the paucity of broadband WLF
  spectra, leading to ambiguity. Two commonly proposed mechanisms are
  optically thin recombination radiation in the chromosphere resulting
  from overionisation during the flare or optically thick radiation from
  the photosphere/upper photosphere resulting from enhanced H- opacity
  (an enhanced blackbody spectrum). Each mechanism can impose strong
  constraints on models of energy transport. Of course a combination of
  mechanisms is also possible. In the standard flare model, energy is
  transported to the chromosphere via a beam of non-thermal electrons. To
  address how WLFs would be produced in this standard model we performed
  a parameter study, simulating 43 flares using RADYN, a radiation
  hydrodynamics flare code. This study covered a range of typical
  non-thermal electron beam distributions and energy fluxes. It was
  found that in all cases the peak flare contribution to WLFs originated
  in the upper chromosphere as a result of recombinations. For harder
  non-thermal electron distributions there was also a non-negligible
  contribution of H- emission from the lower chromosphere and upper
  photosphere owing to an extended region of increased electron density
  (itself resulting from stronger, more deeply penetrating, non-thermal
  collisional ionisation rates). From this we predict that flares with a
  harder non-thermal electron distribution may exhibit a larger vertical
  extent when viewed on the limb. We were unable to simulate solely
  optically thick sources of WLFs. Our simulated WLF spectra are in
  good agreement with recent observations. Not all of our simulations
  resulted in an observable WLF. In lower energy simulations, flare
  energy input resulted in an enhanced opacity in the upper atmosphere
  but without sufficient ionization/recombination to produce a strong
  enough emissivity to counter the opacity. Thus we find that not all
  flares are white light flares.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The ngVLA's Role in Exoplanet Science: Constraining Exo-Space
    Weather
Authors: Osten, Rachel A.; Crosley, Michael K.; Gudel, Manuel;
   Kowalski, Adam F.; Lazio, Joe; Linsky, Jeffrey; Murphy, Eric; White,
   Stephen
2018arXiv180305345O    Altcode:
  Radio observations are currently the only way to explore accelerated
  particles in cool stellar environments. We describe how a next
  generation VLA can contribute to the understanding of the stellar
  contribution to exo-space weather. This area holds both academic and
  popular interest, and is expected to grow in the next several decades.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Detection of a Millimeter Flare from Proxima Centauri
Authors: MacGregor, Meredith A.; Weinberger, Alycia J.; Wilner,
   David J.; Kowalski, Adam F.; Cranmer, Steven R.
2018ApJ...855L...2M    Altcode: 2018arXiv180208257M
  We present new analyses of ALMA 12 m and Atacama Compact Array (ACA)
  observations at 233 GHz (1.3 mm) of the Proxima Centauri system with
  sensitivities of 9.5 and 47 μJy beam<SUP>-1</SUP>, respectively,
  taken from 2017 January 21 through April 25. These analyses reveal
  that the star underwent a significant flaring event during one of
  the ACA observations on 2017 March 24. The complete event lasted for
  approximately 1 minute and reached a peak flux density of 100 ± 4 mJy,
  nearly a factor of 1000 times brighter than the star’s quiescent
  emission. At the flare peak, the continuum emission is characterized
  by a steeply falling spectral index with frequency F <SUB> ν </SUB>
  ∝ ν <SUP> α </SUP> with α = -1.77 ± 0.45, and a lower limit on
  the fractional linear polarization of | Q/I| =0.19+/- 0.02. Because
  the ACA observations do not show any quiescent excess emission, we
  conclude that there is no need to invoke the presence of a dust belt
  at 1-4 au. We also posit that the slight excess flux density of 101 ±
  9 μJy observed in the 12 m observations, compared to the photospheric
  flux density of 74 ± 4 μJy extrapolated from infrared wavelengths,
  may be due to coronal heating from continual smaller flares, as is
  seen for AU Mic, another nearby well-studied M dwarf flare star. If
  this is true, then the need for warm dust at ∼0.4 au is also removed.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: VizieR Online Data Catalog: MUSCLES Treasury Survey. IV. M
    dwarf UV fluxes (Youngblood+, 2017)
Authors: Youngblood, A.; France, K.; Loyd, R. O. P.; Brown, A.;
   Mason, J. P.; Schneider, P. C.; Tilley, M. A.; Berta-Thompson, Z. K.;
   Buccino, A.; Froning, C. S.; Hawley, S. L.; Linsky, J.; Mauas,
   P. J. D.; Redfield, S.; Kowalski, A.; Miguel, Y.; Newton, E. R.;
   Rugheimer, S.; Segura, A.; Roberge, A.; Vieytes, M.
2018yCat..18430031Y    Altcode:
  We selected stars with HST UV spectra and ground-based optical spectra
  either obtained directly by us or available in the VLT/XSHOOTER or
  Keck/HIRES public archives. <P />Several targets have spectroscopic
  data obtained with the Dual Imaging Spectrograph (DIS) on the
  ARC 3.5m telescope at Apache Point Observatory (APO), R~2500, or
  the REOSC echelle spectrograph on the 2.15m telescope at Complejo
  Astronomico El Leoncito (CASLEO), R~12000, within a day or two of
  the HST observations. We also gathered spectra of GJ1132, GJ1214,
  and Proxima Cen on the nights of 2016 March 7-9 using the MIKE echelle
  spectrograph on the Magellan Clay telescope. <P />(2 data files).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Mega-MUSCLES HST Treasury Survey
Authors: Froning, Cynthia S.; France, Kevin; Loyd, R. O. Parke;
   Youngblood, Allison; Brown, Alexander; Schneider, Christian;
   Berta-Thompson, Zachory; Kowalski, Adam
2018AAS...23111105F    Altcode:
  JWST will be able to observe the atmospheres of rocky planets transiting
  nearby M dwarfs. A few such planets are already known (around GJ1132,
  Proxima Cen, and Trappist-1) and TESS is predicted to find many more,
  including ~14 habitable zone planets. To interpret observations of these
  exoplanets' atmospheres, we must understand the high-energy SED of
  their host stars: X-ray/EUV irradiation can erode a planet's gaseous
  envelope and FUV/NUV-driven photochemistry shapes an atmosphere's
  molecular abundances, including potential biomarkers like O2, O3, and
  CH4. Our MUSCLES Treasury Survey (Cycles 19+22) used Hubble/COS+STIS
  UV observations with contemporaneous X-ray and ground-based data to
  construct complete SEDs for 11 low-mass exoplanet hosts. MUSCLES is
  the most widely used database for early-M and K dwarf (&gt;0.3 M_sun)
  irradiance spectra and has supported a wide range of atmospheric
  stability and biomarker modeling work. However, TESS will find most
  of its habitable planets transiting stars less massive than this,
  and these will be the planets to characterize with JWST. Here, we
  introduce the Mega-MUSCLES project, an approved HST Cycle 25 Treasury
  program. Following on the successful MUSCLES survey, Mega-MUSCLES will
  expand our target list to focus on: (a) new M dwarf exoplanet hosts with
  varying properties; (b) reference M dwarfs below 0.3 solar masses that
  may be used as proxies for M dwarf planet hosts discovered after HST's
  lifetime; and (c) more rapidly rotating stars of GJ1132's mass to probe
  XUV evolution over gigayear timescales. We will also gather the first
  panchromatic SEDs of rocky planet hosts GJ1132 and Trappist-1. Here,
  we present an overview of the Mega-MUSCLES motivation, targets list,
  and status of the survey and show how it extends proven methods to a
  key new sample of stars, upon which critically depends the long-term
  goal of studying habitable planet atmospheres with JWST and beyond.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Parameterizations of Chromospheric Condensations in dG and
    dMe Model Flare Atmospheres
Authors: Kowalski, Adam F.; Allred, Joel C.
2018ApJ...852...61K    Altcode: 2017arXiv171109488K
  The origin of the near-ultraviolet and optical continuum radiation
  in flares is critical for understanding particle acceleration and
  impulsive heating in stellar atmospheres. Radiative-hydrodynamic (RHD)
  simulations in 1D have shown that high energy deposition rates from
  electron beams produce two flaring layers at T ∼ 10<SUP>4</SUP> K
  that develop in the chromosphere: a cooling condensation (downflowing
  compression) and heated non-moving (stationary) flare layers just below
  the condensation. These atmospheres reproduce several observed phenomena
  in flare spectra, such as the red-wing asymmetry of the emission lines
  in solar flares and a small Balmer jump ratio in M dwarf flares. The
  high beam flux simulations are computationally expensive in 1D, and the
  (human) timescales for completing NLTE models with adaptive grids in
  3D will likely be unwieldy for some time to come. We have developed a
  prescription for predicting the approximate evolved states, continuum
  optical depth, and emergent continuum flux spectra of RHD model flare
  atmospheres. These approximate prescriptions are based on an important
  atmospheric parameter: the column mass ({m}<SUB>{ref</SUB>}) at which
  hydrogen becomes nearly completely ionized at the depths that are
  approximately in steady state with the electron beam heating. Using this
  new modeling approach, we find that high energy flux density (&gt;F11)
  electron beams are needed to reproduce the brightest observed continuum
  intensity in IRIS data of the 2014 March 29 X1 solar flare, and that
  variation in {m}<SUB>{ref</SUB>} from 0.001 to 0.02 g cm<SUP>-2</SUP>
  reproduces most of the observed range of the optical continuum flux
  ratios at the peak of M dwarf flares.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Focusing Optics X-ray Solar Imager (FOXSI) SMEX Mission
Authors: Christe, S.; Shih, A. Y.; Krucker, S.; Glesener, L.;
   Saint-Hilaire, P.; Caspi, A.; Allred, J. C.; Battaglia, M.; Chen, B.;
   Drake, J. F.; Gary, D. E.; Goetz, K.; Gburek, S.; Grefenstette, B.;
   Hannah, I. G.; Holman, G.; Hudson, H. S.; Inglis, A. R.; Ireland,
   J.; Ishikawa, S. N.; Klimchuk, J. A.; Kontar, E.; Kowalski, A. F.;
   Massone, A. M.; Piana, M.; Ramsey, B.; Schwartz, R.; Steslicki, M.;
   Turin, P.; Ryan, D.; Warmuth, A.; Veronig, A.; Vilmer, N.; White,
   S. M.; Woods, T. N.
2017AGUFMSH44A..07C    Altcode:
  We present FOXSI (Focusing Optics X-ray Solar Imager), a Small Explorer
  (SMEX) Heliophysics mission that is currently undergoing a Phase A
  concept study. FOXSI will provide a revolutionary new perspective
  on energy release and particle acceleration on the Sun. FOXSI is
  a direct imaging X-ray spectrometer with higher dynamic range and
  better than 10x the sensitivity of previous instruments. Flown
  on a 3-axis-stabilized spacecraft in low-Earth orbit, FOXSI uses
  high-angular-resolution grazing-incidence focusing optics combined
  with state-of-the-art pixelated solid-state detectors to provide direct
  imaging of solar hard X-rays for the first time. FOXSI is composed of
  a pair of x-ray telescopes with a 14-meter focal length enabled by a
  deployable boom. Making use of a filter-wheel and high-rate-capable
  solid-state detectors, FOXSI will be able to observe the largest flares
  without saturation while still maintaining the sensitivity to detect
  x-ray emission from weak flares, escaping electrons, and hot active
  regions. This mission concept is made possible by past experience with
  similar instruments on two FOXSI sounding rocket flights, in 2012 and
  2014, and on the HEROES balloon flight in 2013. FOXSI's hard X-ray
  imager has a field of view of 9 arcminutes and an angular resolution
  of better than 8 arcsec; it will cover the energy range from 3 up to
  50-70 keV with a spectral resolution of better than 1 keV; and it will
  have sub-second temporal resolution.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Anticipated Results from the FOXSI SMEX Mission
Authors: Shih, A. Y.; Christe, S.; Krucker, S.; Glesener, L.;
   Saint-Hilaire, P.; Caspi, A.; Allred, J. C.; Battaglia, M.; Chen, B.;
   Drake, J. F.; Gary, D. E.; Gburek, S.; Goetz, K.; Grefenstette, B.;
   Gubarev, M.; Hannah, I. G.; Holman, G.; Hudson, H. S.; Inglis, A. R.;
   Ireland, J.; Ishikawa, S. N.; Klimchuk, J. A.; Kontar, E.; Kowalski,
   A. F.; Massone, A. M.; Piana, M.; Ramsey, B.; Ryan, D.; Schwartz,
   R.; Steslicki, M.; Turin, P.; Veronig, A.; Vilmer, N.; Warmuth, A.;
   White, S. M.; Woods, T. N.
2017AGUFMSH43C..03S    Altcode:
  While there have been significant advances in our understanding
  of impulsive energy release at the Sun since the advent of RHESSI
  observations, there is a clear need for new X-ray observations that
  can capture the full range of emission in flares (e.g., faint coronal
  sources near bright chromospheric sources), follow the intricate
  evolution of energy release and changes in morphology, and search
  for the signatures of impulsive energy release in even the quiescent
  Sun. The FOXSI Small Explorer (SMEX) mission, currently undergoing a
  Phase A concept study, combines state-of-the-art grazing-incidence
  focusing optics with pixelated solid-state detectors to provide
  direct imaging of hard X-rays for the first time on a solar
  observatory. FOXSI's X-ray observations will provide quantitative
  information on (1) the non-thermal populations of accelerated electrons
  and (2) the thermal plasma distributions at the high temperatures
  inaccessible through other wavelengths. FOXSI's major science questions
  include: Where are electrons accelerated and on what time scales? Where
  do escaping flare-accelerated electrons originate? What is the energy
  input of accelerated electrons into the chromosphere and corona? How
  much do flare-like processes heat the corona above active regions? Here
  we present examples with simulated observations to show how FOXSI's
  capabilities will address and resolve these and other questions.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A Unified Understanding of Flare Heating
Authors: Kowalski, Adam
2017xmm..prop..101K    Altcode:
  M dwarf flares exhibit a strong response in the X-ray and NUV,
  in linewith the Neupert effect. However, some flares produce only
  bright X-raysand others only a bright NUV response. Our fundamental
  understanding ofstellar flares is therefore hampered by the lack of
  multi-wavelengthdata. We propose a large XMM campaign to determine
  the origin ofNeupert versus non-Neupert flares in AU Mic. The timing,
  amplitude,and atmospheric parameters of the flares will determine
  whether thedifferences are related to the relative roles of proton and
  electronbeam heating. This study will also constrain the high-energy
  tail of AUMic's flare frequency and hence enable a test of whether
  the system'sdebris disk is experiencing space-weather.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: First Detection of a Strong Magnetic Field on a Bursty Brown
Dwarf: Puzzle Solved
Authors: Berdyugina, S. V.; Harrington, D. M.; Kuzmychov, O.; Kuhn,
   J. R.; Hallinan, G.; Kowalski, A. F.; Hawley, S. L.
2017ApJ...847...61B    Altcode: 2017arXiv170902861B
  We report the first direct detection of a strong, 5 kG magnetic field on
  the surface of an active brown dwarf. LSR J1835+3259 is an M8.5 dwarf
  exhibiting transient radio and optical emission bursts modulated by
  fast rotation. We have detected the surface magnetic field as circularly
  polarized signatures in the 819 nm sodium lines when an active emission
  region faced the Earth. Modeling Stokes profiles of these lines reveals
  the effective temperature of 2800 K and log gravity acceleration of
  4.5. These parameters place LSR J1835+3259 on evolutionary tracks as
  a young brown dwarf with the mass of 55+/- 4{M}<SUB>{{J</SUB>}} and
  age of 22 ± 4 Myr. Its magnetic field is at least 5.1 kG and covers
  at least 11% of the visible hemisphere. The active region topology
  recovered using line profile inversions comprises hot plasma loops with
  a vertical stratification of optical and radio emission sources. These
  loops rotate with the dwarf in and out of view causing periodic emission
  bursts. The magnetic field is detected at the base of the loops. This
  is the first time that we can quantitatively associate brown dwarf
  non-thermal bursts with a strong, 5 kG surface magnetic field and
  solve the puzzle of their driving mechanism. This is also the coolest
  known dwarf with such a strong surface magnetic field. The young age
  of LSR J1835+3259 implies that it may still maintain a disk, which may
  facilitate bursts via magnetospheric accretion, like in higher-mass
  T Tau-type stars. Our results pave a path toward magnetic studies of
  brown dwarfs and hot Jupiters.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Simulating the Mg II NUV Spectra &amp; C II Resonance Lines
    During Solar Flares
Authors: Kerr, Graham Stewart; Allred, Joel C.; Leenaarts, Jorrit;
   Butler, Elizabeth; Kowalski, Adam
2017SPD....48.0102K    Altcode:
  The solar chromosphere is the origin of the bulk of the enhanced
  radiative output during solar flares, and so comprehensive understanding
  of this region is important if we wish to understand energy transport in
  solar flares. It is only relatively recently, however, with the launch
  of IRIS that we have routine spectroscopic flarea observations of the
  chromsphere and transition region. Since several of the spectral lines
  observed by IRIS are optically thick, it is necessary to use forward
  modelling to extract the useful information that these lines carry about
  the flaring chromosphere and transition region. We present the results
  of modelling the formation properties Mg II resonance lines &amp;
  subordinate lines, and the C II resonance lines during solar flares. We
  focus on understanding their relation to the physical strucutre of the
  flaring atmosphere, exploiting formation height differences to determine
  if we can extract information about gradients in the atmosphere. We
  show the effect of degrading the profiles to the resolution of the
  IRIS, and that the usual observational techniques used to identify
  the line centroid do a poor job in the early stages of the flare
  (partly due to multiple optically thick line components). Finally,
  we will tentatively comment on the effects that 3D radiation transfer
  may have on these lines.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The MUSCLES Treasury Survey. IV. Scaling Relations for
    Ultraviolet, Ca II K, and Energetic Particle Fluxes from M Dwarfs
Authors: Youngblood, Allison; France, Kevin; Loyd, R. O. Parke; Brown,
   Alexander; Mason, James P.; Schneider, P. Christian; Tilley, Matt A.;
   Berta-Thompson, Zachory K.; Buccino, Andrea; Froning, Cynthia S.;
   Hawley, Suzanne L.; Linsky, Jeffrey; Mauas, Pablo J. D.; Redfield,
   Seth; Kowalski, Adam; Miguel, Yamila; Newton, Elisabeth R.; Rugheimer,
   Sarah; Segura, Antígona; Roberge, Aki; Vieytes, Mariela
2017ApJ...843...31Y    Altcode: 2017arXiv170504361Y
  Characterizing the UV spectral energy distribution (SED) of
  an exoplanet host star is critically important for assessing its
  planet’s potential habitability, particularly for M dwarfs, as they
  are prime targets for current and near-term exoplanet characterization
  efforts and atmospheric models predict that their UV radiation can
  produce photochemistry on habitable zone planets different from that
  on Earth. To derive ground-based proxies for UV emission for use when
  Hubble Space Telescope (HST) observations are unavailable, we have
  assembled a sample of 15 early to mid-M dwarfs observed by HST and
  compared their nonsimultaneous UV and optical spectra. We find that
  the equivalent width of the chromospheric Ca II K line at 3933 Å, when
  corrected for spectral type, can be used to estimate the stellar surface
  flux in ultraviolet emission lines, including H I Lyα. In addition,
  we address another potential driver of habitability: energetic particle
  fluxes associated with flares. We present a new technique for estimating
  soft X-ray and &gt;10 MeV proton flux during far-UV emission line flares
  (Si IV and He II) by assuming solar-like energy partitions. We analyze
  several flares from the M4 dwarf GJ 876 observed with HST and Chandra as
  part of the MUSCLES Treasury Survey and find that habitable zone planets
  orbiting GJ 876 are impacted by large Carrington-like flares with peak
  soft X-ray fluxes ≥10<SUP>-3</SUP> W m<SUP>-2</SUP> and possible
  proton fluxes ∼10<SUP>2</SUP>-10<SUP>3</SUP> pfu, approximately four
  orders of magnitude more frequently than modern-day Earth.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Radio Optical Multiwavelength Stellar Flares and Constraints
    on the Electron Population from a Joint Analysis
Authors: Osten, Rachel; Kowalski, Adam
2017reph.conf40002O    Altcode:
  The accelerated particles produced in stellar magnetic reconnection
  events are important in shaping the habitable environment around the
  star. Radio gyrosynchrotron flares trace the presence and action of
  accelerated electrons high in the stellar atmosphere, while flares
  observed at optical wavelengths probe the response lower in the stellar
  atmosphere to the heating provided by electron beams. We present the
  results of a several day multi wavelength observing campaign on the
  nearby flare star EV Lac. The multifrequency radio observations probe
  the non thermal particle energy and its dependence on the index of
  the power-law distribution of particle energy as well as the magnetic
  field strength, while optical observations constrain optical radiated
  energy and limits on total bolometric flare radiated energy. We discuss
  how the spectral shape of the optical flares can potentially constrain
  the lower limit of the electron population, and what the coincidence
  or lack thereof of simultaneously observed flares tells us about the
  generalness of flare processes.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Suppression of Hydrogen Emission in an X-class White-light
    Solar Flare
Authors: Procházka, Ondřej; Milligan, Ryan O.; Allred, Joel C.;
   Kowalski, Adam F.; Kotrč, Pavel; Mathioudakis, Mihalis
2017ApJ...837...46P    Altcode: 2017arXiv170200638P
  We present unique NUV observations of a well-observed X-class flare
  from NOAA 12087 obtained at the Ondřejov Observatory. The flare
  shows a strong white-light continuum but no detectable emission in
  the higher Balmer and Lyman lines. Reuven Ramaty High-Energy Solar
  Spectroscopic Imager and Fermi observations indicate an extremely
  hard X-ray spectrum and γ-ray emission. We use the RADYN radiative
  hydrodynamic code to perform two types of simulations: one where an
  energy of 3 × 10<SUP>11</SUP> erg cm<SUP>-2</SUP> s<SUP>-1</SUP>
  is deposited by an electron beam with a spectral index of ≈3, and a
  second where the same energy is applied directly to the photosphere. The
  combination of observations and simulations allows us to conclude
  that the white-light emission and the suppression or complete lack
  of hydrogen emission lines is best explained by a model where the
  dominant energy deposition layer is located in the lower layers of
  the solar atmosphere, rather than the chromosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Hydrogen Balmer Line Broadening in Solar and Stellar Flares
Authors: Kowalski, Adam F.; Allred, Joel C.; Uitenbroek, Han; Tremblay,
   Pier-Emmanuel; Brown, Stephen; Carlsson, Mats; Osten, Rachel A.;
   Wisniewski, John P.; Hawley, Suzanne L.
2017ApJ...837..125K    Altcode: 2017arXiv170203321K
  The broadening of the hydrogen lines during flares is thought to
  result from increased charge (electron, proton) density in the flare
  chromosphere. However, disagreements between theory and modeling
  prescriptions have precluded an accurate diagnostic of the degree
  of ionization and compression resulting from flare heating in the
  chromosphere. To resolve this issue, we have incorporated the unified
  theory of electric pressure broadening of the hydrogen lines into
  the non-LTE radiative-transfer code RH. This broadening prescription
  produces a much more realistic spectrum of the quiescent, A0 star Vega
  compared to the analytic approximations used as a damping parameter
  in the Voigt profiles. We test recent radiative-hydrodynamic (RHD)
  simulations of the atmospheric response to high nonthermal electron
  beam fluxes with the new broadening prescription and find that
  the Balmer lines are overbroadened at the densest times in the
  simulations. Adding many simultaneously heated and cooling model
  loops as a “multithread” model improves the agreement with the
  observations. We revisit the three-component phenomenological flare
  model of the YZ CMi Megaflare using recent and new RHD models. The
  evolution of the broadening, line flux ratios, and continuum flux
  ratios are well-reproduced by a multithread model with high-flux
  nonthermal electron beam heating, an extended decay phase model, and a
  “hot spot” atmosphere heated by an ultrarelativistic electron beam
  with reasonable filling factors: ∼0.1%, 1%, and 0.1% of the visible
  stellar hemisphere, respectively. The new modeling motivates future
  work to understand the origin of the extended gradual phase emission.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Atmospheric Response to High Nonthermal Electron Beam
    Fluxes in Solar Flares. I. Modeling the Brightest NUV Footpoints in
    the X1 Solar Flare of 2014 March 29
Authors: Kowalski, Adam F.; Allred, Joel C.; Daw, Adrian; Cauzzi,
   Gianna; Carlsson, Mats
2017ApJ...836...12K    Altcode: 2016arXiv160907390K
  The 2014 March 29 X1 solar flare (SOL20140329T17:48) produced bright
  continuum emission in the far- and near-ultraviolet (NUV) and highly
  asymmetric chromospheric emission lines, providing long-sought
  constraints on the heating mechanisms of the lower atmosphere in
  solar flares. We analyze the continuum and emission line data from
  the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS) of the brightest
  flaring magnetic footpoints in this flare. We compare the NUV spectra
  of the brightest pixels to new radiative-hydrodynamic predictions
  calculated with the RADYN code using constraints on a nonthermal
  electron beam inferred from the collisional thick-target modeling of
  hard X-ray data from Reuven Ramaty High Energy Solar Spectroscopic
  Imager. We show that the atmospheric response to a high beam flux
  density satisfactorily achieves the observed continuum brightness
  in the NUV. The NUV continuum emission in this flare is consistent
  with hydrogen (Balmer) recombination radiation that originates from
  low optical depth in a dense chromospheric condensation and from the
  stationary beam-heated layers just below the condensation. A model
  producing two flaring regions (a condensation and stationary layers)
  in the lower atmosphere is also consistent with the asymmetric Fe II
  chromospheric emission line profiles observed in the impulsive phase.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar Ellerman Bombs in 1D Radiative Hydrodynamics
Authors: Reid, A.; Mathioudakis, M.; Kowalski, A.; Doyle, J. G.;
   Allred, J. C.
2017ApJ...835L..37R    Altcode: 2017arXiv170104213R
  Recent observations from the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph
  appear to show impulsive brightenings in high temperature lines,
  which when combined with simultaneous ground-based observations in
  Hα, appear co-spatial to Ellerman Bombs (EBs). We use the RADYN
  one-dimensional radiative transfer code in an attempt to try and
  reproduce the observed line profiles and simulate the atmospheric
  conditions of these events. Combined with the MULTI/RH line synthesis
  codes, we compute the Hα, Ca II 8542 Å, and Mg II h and k lines for
  these simulated events and compare them to previous observations. Our
  findings hint that the presence of superheated regions in the
  photosphere (&gt;10,000 K) is not a plausible explanation for the
  production of EB signatures. While we are able to recreate EB-like
  line profiles in Hα, Ca II 8542 Å, and Mg II h and k, we cannot
  achieve agreement with all of these simultaneously.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Exploring impulsive solar magnetic energy release and particle
    acceleration with focused hard X-ray imaging spectroscopy
Authors: Christe, Steven; Krucker, Samuel; Glesener, Lindsay; Shih,
   Albert; Saint-Hilaire, Pascal; Caspi, Amir; Allred, Joel; Battaglia,
   Marina; Chen, Bin; Drake, James; Dennis, Brian; Gary, Dale; Gburek,
   Szymon; Goetz, Keith; Grefenstette, Brian; Gubarev, Mikhail; Hannah,
   Iain; Holman, Gordon; Hudson, Hugh; Inglis, Andrew; Ireland, Jack;
   Ishikawa, Shinosuke; Klimchuk, James; Kontar, Eduard; Kowalski, Adam;
   Longcope, Dana; Massone, Anna-Maria; Musset, Sophie; Piana, Michele;
   Ramsey, Brian; Ryan, Daniel; Schwartz, Richard; Stęślicki, Marek;
   Turin, Paul; Warmuth, Alexander; Wilson-Hodge, Colleen; White, Stephen;
   Veronig, Astrid; Vilmer, Nicole; Woods, Tom
2017arXiv170100792C    Altcode:
  How impulsive magnetic energy release leads to solar eruptions and how
  those eruptions are energized and evolve are vital unsolved problems
  in Heliophysics. The standard model for solar eruptions summarizes
  our current understanding of these events. Magnetic energy in the
  corona is released through drastic restructuring of the magnetic
  field via reconnection. Electrons and ions are then accelerated by
  poorly understood processes. Theories include contracting loops,
  merging magnetic islands, stochastic acceleration, and turbulence at
  shocks, among others. Although this basic model is well established,
  the fundamental physics is poorly understood. HXR observations
  using grazing-incidence focusing optics can now probe all of the key
  regions of the standard model. These include two above-the-looptop
  (ALT) sources which bookend the reconnection region and are likely
  the sites of particle acceleration and direct heating. The science
  achievable by a direct HXR imaging instrument can be summarized by the
  following science questions and objectives which are some of the most
  outstanding issues in solar physics (1) How are particles accelerated
  at the Sun? (1a) Where are electrons accelerated and on what time
  scales? (1b) What fraction of electrons is accelerated out of the
  ambient medium? (2) How does magnetic energy release on the Sun lead
  to flares and eruptions? A Focusing Optics X-ray Solar Imager (FOXSI)
  instrument, which can be built now using proven technology and at modest
  cost, would enable revolutionary advancements in our understanding of
  impulsive magnetic energy release and particle acceleration, a process
  which is known to occur at the Sun but also throughout the Universe.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A Chromospheric Flare Model Consisting of Two Dynamical Layers:
    Critical Tests from IRIS Data of Solar Flares
Authors: Kowalski, Adam; Allred, Joel C.; Daw, Adrian N.; Cauzzi,
   Gianna; Carlsson, Mats; Inglis, Andrew; O'Neill, Aaron; Mathioudakis,
   Mihalis; Uitenbroek, Han
2017AAS...22933902K    Altcode:
  Recent 1D radiative-hydrodynamic simulations of flares have shown that
  a heated, chromospheric compression layer and a stationary layer, just
  below the compression, are produced in response to high flux electron
  beam heating. The hot blackbody-like continuum and redshifted intensity
  in singly ionized chromospheric lines in these model predictions are
  generally consistent with broad wavelength coverage spectra of M dwarf
  flares and with high spectral resolution observations of solar flares,
  respectively. We critically test this two-component chromospheric
  flare model against the Fe II profiles and NUV continuum brightness
  for several X-class solar flares observed with the Interface Region
  Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS). We present several new predictions for
  the Daniel K. Inoue Solar Telescope (DKIST).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Observations and Simulations of the Na I D<SUB>1</SUB> Line
    Profiles in an M-class Solar Flare
Authors: Kuridze, D.; Mathioudakis, M.; Christian, D. J.; Kowalski,
   A. F.; Jess, D. B.; Grant, S. D. T.; Kawate, T.; Simões, P. J. A.;
   Allred, J. C.; Keenan, F. P.
2016ApJ...832..147K    Altcode: 2016arXiv160908120K
  We study the temporal evolution of the Na I D<SUB>1</SUB> line profiles
  in the M3.9 flare SOL2014-06-11T21:03 UT, using observations at high
  spectral resolution obtained with the Interferometric Bidimensional
  Spectrometer instrument on the Dunn Solar Telescope combined with
  radiative hydrodynamic simulations. Our results show a significant
  increase in the intensities of the line core and wings during the
  flare. The analysis of the line profiles from the flare ribbons
  reveals that the Na I D<SUB>1</SUB> line has a central reversal
  with excess emission in the blue wing (blue asymmetry). We combine
  RADYN and RH simulations to synthesize Na I D<SUB>1</SUB> line
  profiles of the flaring atmosphere and find good agreement with
  the observations. Heating with a beam of electrons modifies the
  radiation field in the flaring atmosphere and excites electrons
  from the ground state 3s <SUP>2</SUP>S to the first excited state 3p
  <SUP>2</SUP>P, which in turn modifies the relative population of the
  two states. The change in temperature and the population density of
  the energy states make the sodium line profile revert from absorption
  into emission. Furthermore, the rapid changes in temperature break the
  pressure balance between the different layers of the lower atmosphere,
  generating upflow/downflow patterns. Analysis of the simulated spectra
  reveals that the asymmetries of the Na I D<SUB>1</SUB> flare profile
  are produced by the velocity gradients in the lower solar atmosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Suppression of Hydrogen Emission in a White-light Solar Flare
Authors: Milligan, R. O.; Procházka, O.; Mathioudakis, M.; Allred,
   J. C.; Kowalski, A. F.
2016AGUFMSH31B2561P    Altcode: 2016AGUFMSH31B2561M
  We present an analysis of an X-class flare that occurred on 11
  June 2014 in active region NOAA 12087 using a newly developed high
  cadence Image Selector operated by Astronomical Institute in Ondrejov,
  Czech Republic. This instrument provides spectra in the 350-440 nm
  wavelength range, which covers the higher order Balmer lines as well
  as the Balmer jump at 364 nm. However, no detectable increase in these
  emissions were detected during the flare, and support observations from
  SDO/EVE MEGS-B also show that the Lyman line series and recombination
  continuum were also suppressed, particularly when compared to two
  other X-class flares on the preceding day. The X-class flare under
  investigation also showed strong white light emission in SDO/HMI
  data, as well as an extremely hard electron spectrum (delta 3.6),
  and gamma-ray emission, from RHESSI data. This unique combination
  of datasets was amended with radiative hydrodynamic model of direct
  minimum temperature region heating. The results allow us to conclude
  that the white light emission from this flare corresponds to a black
  body heated by high-energy electrons (and/or ions), as opposed to
  optical chromospheric emission from hydrogen.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Investigating the Effects of Stark Broadening in the Balmer
    Lines Observed in Solar Flares
Authors: Allred, J. C.; Kowalski, A. F.
2016AGUFMSH43E..04A    Altcode:
  During solar flares, the ambient electron density in the region where
  Balmer lines form can be elevated by several orders of magnitude,
  resulting in dramatically broadened lines due to the linear Stark
  effect. In fact, modeling these broadened line profiles can provide a
  direct measurement of the flaring chromosphere electron density. This
  diagnostic is useful for determining atmospheric stratification
  in flaring loops. Here we present results from a radiative transfer
  model based on the RH code (Uitenbroek 2001) that has been enhanced to
  include the Vidal, Cooper and Smith (1973; VCS) unified Stark broadening
  theory. We find that in flaring conditions previous models significantly
  underestimate the broadening in Balmer lines. We use our simulations
  to predict Balmer decrements and show how matching line profiles with
  observations constrains the flaring chromospheric electron density.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Focusing Optics X-ray Solar Imager (FOXSI) SMEX Mission
Authors: Christe, S.; Shih, A. Y.; Krucker, S.; Glesener, L.;
   Saint-Hilaire, P.; Caspi, A.; Allred, J. C.; Battaglia, M.; Chen,
   B.; Drake, J. F.; Gary, D. E.; Goetz, K.; Grefenstette, B.; Hannah,
   I. G.; Holman, G.; Hudson, H. S.; Inglis, A. R.; Ireland, J.; Ishikawa,
   S. N.; Klimchuk, J. A.; Kontar, E.; Kowalski, A. F.; Massone, A. M.;
   Piana, M.; Ramsey, B.; Gubarev, M.; Schwartz, R. A.; Steslicki, M.;
   Ryan, D.; Turin, P.; Warmuth, A.; White, S. M.; Veronig, A.; Vilmer,
   N.; Dennis, B. R.
2016AGUFMSH13A2281C    Altcode:
  We present FOXSI (Focusing Optics X-ray Solar Imager), a recently
  proposed Small Explorer (SMEX) mission that will provide a revolutionary
  new perspective on energy release and particle acceleration on the
  Sun. FOXSI is a direct imaging X-ray spectrometer with higher dynamic
  range and better than 10x the sensitivity of previous instruments. Flown
  on a 3-axis stabilized spacecraft in low-Earth orbit, FOXSI uses
  high-angular-resolution grazing-incidence focusing optics combined
  with state-of-the-art pixelated solid-state detectors to provide direct
  imaging of solar hard X-rays for the first time. FOXSI is composed of
  two individual x-ray telescopes with a 14-meter focal length enabled by
  a deployable boom. Making use of a filter-wheel and high-rate-capable
  solid-state detectors, FOXSI will be able to observe the largest flares
  without saturation while still maintaining the sensitivity to detect
  x-ray emission from weak flares, escaping electrons, and hot active
  regions. This SMEX mission is made possible by past experience with
  similar instruments on two sounding rocket flights, in 2012 and 2014,
  and on the HEROES balloon flight in 2013. FOXSI will image the Sun
  with a field of view of 9 arcminutes and an angular resolution of
  better than 8 arcsec; it will cover the energy range from 3 to 100
  keV with a spectral resolution of better than 1 keV; and it will have
  sub-second temporal resolution.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A Very Bright, Very Hot, and Very Long Flaring Event from
    the M Dwarf Binary System DG CVn
Authors: Osten, Rachel A.; Kowalski, Adam; Drake, Stephen A.; Krimm,
   Hans; Page, Kim; Gazeas, Kosmas; Kennea, Jamie; Oates, Samantha;
   Page, Mathew; de Miguel, Enrique; Novák, Rudolf; Apeltauer, Tomas;
   Gehrels, Neil
2016ApJ...832..174O    Altcode: 2016arXiv160904674O
  On 2014 April 23, the Swift satellite responded to a hard X-ray
  transient detected by its Burst Alert Telescope, which turned out to
  be a stellar flare from a nearby, young M dwarf binary DG CVn. We
  utilize observations at X-ray, UV, optical, and radio wavelengths
  to infer the properties of two large flares. The X-ray spectrum of
  the primary outburst can be described over the 0.3-100 keV bandpass
  by either a single very high-temperature plasma or a nonthermal
  thick-target bremsstrahlung model, and we rule out the nonthermal
  model based on energetic grounds. The temperatures were the highest
  seen spectroscopically in a stellar flare, at T <SUB> X </SUB> of
  290 MK. The first event was followed by a comparably energetic event
  almost a day later. We constrain the photospheric area involved in
  each of the two flares to be &gt;10<SUP>20</SUP> cm<SUP>2</SUP>, and
  find evidence from flux ratios in the second event of contributions
  to the white light flare emission in addition to the usual hot, T ∼
  10<SUP>4</SUP> K blackbody emission seen in the impulsive phase of
  flares. The radiated energy in X-rays and white light reveal these
  events to be the two most energetic X-ray flares observed from an M
  dwarf, with X-ray radiated energies in the 0.3-10 keV bandpass of 4
  × 10<SUP>35</SUP> and 9 × 10<SUP>35</SUP> erg, and optical flare
  energies at E <SUB> V </SUB> of 2.8 × 10<SUP>34</SUP> and 5.2 ×
  10<SUP>34</SUP> erg, respectively. The results presented here should
  be integrated into updated modeling of the astrophysical impact of
  large stellar flares on close-in exoplanetary atmospheres.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Kepler Flares. IV. A Comprehensive Analysis of the Activity
    of the dM4e Star GJ 1243
Authors: Silverberg, Steven M.; Kowalski, Adam F.; Davenport, James
   R. A.; Wisniewski, John P.; Hawley, Suzanne L.; Hilton, Eric J.
2016ApJ...829..129S    Altcode: 2016arXiv160703886S
  We present a comprehensive study of the active dM4e star GJ 1243. We
  use previous observations and ground-based echelle spectroscopy
  to determine that GJ 1243 is a member of the Argus association of
  field stars, suggesting it is ∼ 30{--}50 {{Myr}} old. We analyze 11
  months of 1 minute cadence data from Kepler, presenting Kepler flare
  frequency distributions, as well as determining correlations between
  flare energy, amplitude, duration, and decay time. We find that the
  exponent α of the power-law flare energy distribution varies in
  time, primarily due to completeness of sample and the low frequency
  of high-energy flares. We also find a deviation from a single power
  law at high energy. We use ground-based spectroscopic observations
  that were simultaneous with the Kepler data to provide simultaneous
  photometric and spectroscopic analysis of three low-energy flares,
  the lowest-energy dMe flares with detailed spectral analysis to date on
  any star. The spectroscopic data from these flares extend constraints
  for radiative hydrodynamic flare models to a lower energy regime than
  has previously been studied. We use this simultaneous spectroscopy and
  Kepler photometry to develop approximate conversions from the Kepler
  bandpass to the traditional U and B bands. This conversion will be a
  critical factor in comparing any Kepler flare analyses to the canon
  of previous ground-based flare studies.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Characteristics of Solar X-Class Flares and CMEs: A
    Paradigm for Stellar Superflares and Eruptions?
Authors: Harra, Louise K.; Schrijver, Carolus J.; Janvier, Miho;
   Toriumi, Shin; Hudson, Hugh; Matthews, Sarah; Woods, Magnus M.; Hara,
   Hirohisa; Guedel, Manuel; Kowalski, Adam; Osten, Rachel; Kusano,
   Kanya; Lueftinger, Theresa
2016SoPh..291.1761H    Altcode: 2016SoPh..tmp..111H
  This paper explores the characteristics of 42 solar X-class flares that
  were observed between February 2011 and November 2014, with data from
  the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) and other sources. This flare
  list includes nine X-class flares that had no associated CMEs. In
  particular our aim was to determine whether a clear signature could
  be identified to differentiate powerful flares that have coronal
  mass ejections (CMEs) from those that do not. Part of the motivation
  for this study is the characterization of the solar paradigm for
  flare/CME occurrence as a possible guide to the stellar observations;
  hence we emphasize spectroscopic signatures. To do this we ask the
  following questions: Do all eruptive flares have long durations? Do
  CME-related flares stand out in terms of active-region size vs. flare
  duration? Do flare magnitudes correlate with sunspot areas, and, if so,
  are eruptive events distinguished? Is the occurrence of CMEs related to
  the fraction of the active-region area involved? Do X-class flares with
  no eruptions have weaker non-thermal signatures? Is the temperature
  dependence of evaporation different in eruptive and non-eruptive
  flares? Is EUV dimming only seen in eruptive flares? We find only one
  feature consistently associated with CME-related flares specifically:
  coronal dimming in lines characteristic of the quiet-Sun corona,
  i.e. 1 - 2 MK. We do not find a correlation between flare magnitude
  and sunspot areas. Although challenging, it will be of importance to
  model dimming for stellar cases and make suitable future plans for
  observations in the appropriate wavelength range in order to identify
  stellar CMEs consistently.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Flares In Time-Domain Surveys
Authors: Kowalski, Adam; Hawley, Suzanne; Davenport, James; Berlicki,
   Arkadiusz; Cauzzi, Gianna; Fletcher, Lyndsay; Heinzel, Petr; Notsu,
   Yuta; Loyd, Parke; Martinez Oliveros, Juan Carlos; Pugh, Chloe;
   Schmidt, Sarah Jane; Karmakar, Subhajeet; Pye, John; Flaccomio, Ettore
2016csss.confE.126K    Altcode:
  Proceedings for the splinter session "Flares in Time-Domain Surveys"
  convened at Cool Stars 19 on June 07, 2016 in Uppsala, Sweden. Contains
  a two page summary of the splinter session, links to YouTube talks,
  and a PDF copy of the slides from the presenters.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Advances In Understanding Solar And Stellar Flares
Authors: Kowalski, Adam F.
2016csss.confE.127K    Altcode:
  Flares result from the sudden reconnection and relaxation of magnetic
  fields in the coronae of stellar atmospheres. The highly dynamic
  atmospheric response produces radiation across the electromagnetic
  spectrum, from the radio to X-rays, on a range of timescales,
  from seconds to days. New high resolution data of solar flares have
  revealed the intrinsic spatial properties of the flaring chromosphere,
  which is thought to be where the majority of the flare energy
  is released as radiation in the optical and near-UV continua and
  emission lines. New data of stellar flares have revealed the detailed
  properties of the broadband (white-light) continuum emission, which
  provides straightforward constraints for models of the transformation
  of stored magnetic energy in the corona into thermal energy of the
  lower atmosphere. In this talk, we discuss the physical processes that
  produce several important spectral phenomena in the near-ultraviolet
  and optical as revealed from new radiative-hydrodynamic models of
  flares on the Sun and low mass stars. We present recent progress
  with high-flux nonthermal electron beams in reproducing the observed
  optical continuum color temperature of T 10,000 K and the Balmer
  jump properties in the near-ultraviolet. These beams produce dense,
  heated chromospheric condensations, which can explain the shape and
  strength of the continuum emission in M dwarf flares and the red-wing
  asymmetries in the chromospheric emission lines in recent observations
  of solar flares from the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph. Current
  theoretical challenges and future modeling directions will be discussed,
  as well as observational synergies between solar and stellar flares.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The LOFT mission concept: a status update
Authors: Feroci, M.; Bozzo, E.; Brandt, S.; Hernanz, M.; van der Klis,
   M.; Liu, L. -P.; Orleanski, P.; Pohl, M.; Santangelo, A.; Schanne, S.;
   Stella, L.; Takahashi, T.; Tamura, H.; Watts, A.; Wilms, J.; Zane,
   S.; Zhang, S. -N.; Bhattacharyya, S.; Agudo, I.; Ahangarianabhari,
   M.; Albertus, C.; Alford, M.; Alpar, A.; Altamirano, D.; Alvarez,
   L.; Amati, L.; Amoros, C.; Andersson, N.; Antonelli, A.; Argan, A.;
   Artigue, R.; Artigues, B.; Atteia, J. -L.; Azzarello, P.; Bakala, P.;
   Ballantyne, D.; Baldazzi, G.; Baldo, M.; Balman, S.; Barbera, M.; van
   Baren, C.; Barret, D.; Baykal, A.; Begelman, M.; Behar, E.; Behar, O.;
   Belloni, T.; Bernardini, F.; Bertuccio, G.; Bianchi, S.; Bianchini,
   A.; Binko, P.; Blay, P.; Bocchino, F.; Bode, M.; Bodin, P.; Bombaci,
   I.; Bonnet Bidaud, J. -M.; Boutloukos, S.; Bouyjou, F.; Bradley, L.;
   Braga, J.; Briggs, M. S.; Brown, E.; Buballa, M.; Bucciantini, N.;
   Burderi, L.; Burgay, M.; Bursa, M.; Budtz-Jørgensen, C.; Cackett,
   E.; Cadoux, F.; Cais, P.; Caliandro, G. A.; Campana, R.; Campana,
   S.; Cao, X.; Capitanio, F.; Casares, J.; Casella, P.; Castro-Tirado,
   A. J.; Cavazzuti, E.; Cavechi, Y.; Celestin, S.; Cerda-Duran, P.;
   Chakrabarty, D.; Chamel, N.; Château, F.; Chen, C.; Chen, Y.; Chen,
   Y.; Chenevez, J.; Chernyakova, M.; Coker, J.; Cole, R.; Collura,
   A.; Coriat, M.; Cornelisse, R.; Costamante, L.; Cros, A.; Cui, W.;
   Cumming, A.; Cusumano, G.; Czerny, B.; D'Aı, A.; D'Ammando, F.;
   D'Elia, V.; Dai, Z.; Del Monte, E.; De Luca, A.; De Martino, D.;
   Dercksen, J. P. C.; De Pasquale, M.; De Rosa, A.; Del Santo, M.; Di
   Cosimo, S.; Degenaar, N.; den Herder, J. W.; Diebold, S.; Di Salvo,
   T.; Dong, Y.; Donnarumma, I.; Doroshenko, V.; Doyle, G.; Drake, S. A.;
   Durant, M.; Emmanoulopoulos, D.; Enoto, T.; Erkut, M. H.; Esposito,
   P.; Evangelista, Y.; Fabian, A.; Falanga, M.; Favre, Y.; Feldman, C.;
   Fender, R.; Feng, H.; Ferrari, V.; Ferrigno, C.; Finger, M.; Finger,
   M. H.; Fraser, G. W.; Frericks, M.; Fullekrug, M.; Fuschino, F.;
   Gabler, M.; Galloway, D. K.; Gálvez Sanchez, J. L.; Gandhi, P.; Gao,
   Z.; Garcia-Berro, E.; Gendre, B.; Gevin, O.; Gezari, S.; Giles, A. B.;
   Gilfanov, M.; Giommi, P.; Giovannini, G.; Giroletti, M.; Gogus, E.;
   Goldwurm, A.; Goluchová, K.; Götz, D.; Gou, L.; Gouiffes, C.; Grandi,
   P.; Grassi, M.; Greiner, J.; Grinberg, V.; Groot, P.; Gschwender, M.;
   Gualtieri, L.; Guedel, M.; Guidorzi, C.; Guy, L.; Haas, D.; Haensel,
   P.; Hailey, M.; Hamuguchi, K.; Hansen, F.; Hartmann, D. H.; Haswell,
   C. A.; Hebeler, K.; Heger, A.; Hempel, M.; Hermsen, W.; Homan, J.;
   Hornstrup, A.; Hudec, R.; Huovelin, J.; Huppenkothen, D.; Inam, S. C.;
   Ingram, A.; In't Zand, J. J. M.; Israel, G.; Iwasawa, K.; Izzo, L.;
   Jacobs, H. M.; Jetter, F.; Johannsen, T.; Jenke, P. A.; Jonker, P.;
   Josè, J.; Kaaret, P.; Kalamkar, K.; Kalemci, E.; Kanbach, G.; Karas,
   V.; Karelin, D.; Kataria, D.; Keek, L.; Kennedy, T.; Klochkov, D.;
   Kluzniak, W.; Koerding, E.; Kokkotas, K.; Komossa, S.; Korpela, S.;
   Kouveliotou, C.; Kowalski, A. F.; Kreykenbohm, I.; Kuiper, L. M.;
   Kunneriath, D.; Kurkela, A.; Kuvvetli, I.; La Franca, F.; Labanti,
   C.; Lai, D.; Lamb, F. K.; Lachaud, C.; Laubert, P. P.; Lebrun, F.;
   Li, X.; Liang, E.; Limousin, O.; Lin, D.; Linares, M.; Linder, D.;
   Lodato, G.; Longo, F.; Lu, F.; Lund, N.; Maccarone, T. J.; Macera,
   D.; Maestre, S.; Mahmoodifar, S.; Maier, D.; Malcovati, P.; Malzac,
   J.; Malone, C.; Mandel, I.; Mangano, V.; Manousakis, A.; Marelli, M.;
   Margueron, J.; Marisaldi, M.; Markoff, S. B.; Markowitz, A.; Marinucci,
   A.; Martindale, A.; Martínez, G.; McHardy, I. M.; Medina-Tanco, G.;
   Mehdipour, M.; Melatos, A.; Mendez, M.; Mereghetti, S.; Migliari,
   S.; Mignani, R.; Michalska, M.; Mihara, T.; Miller, M. C.; Miller,
   J. M.; Mineo, T.; Miniutti, G.; Morsink, S.; Motch, C.; Motta, S.;
   Mouchet, M.; Mouret, G.; Mulačová, J.; Muleri, F.; Muñoz-Darias,
   T.; Negueruela, I.; Neilsen, J.; Neubert, T.; Norton, A. J.; Nowak,
   M.; Nucita, A.; O'Brien, P.; Oertel, M.; Olsen, P. E. H.; Orienti, M.;
   Orio, M.; Orlandini, M.; Osborne, J. P.; Osten, R.; Ozel, F.; Pacciani,
   L.; Paerels, F.; Paltani, S.; Paolillo, M.; Papadakis, I.; Papitto,
   A.; Paragi, Z.; Paredes, J. M.; Patruno, A.; Paul, B.; Pederiva, F.;
   Perinati, E.; Pellizzoni, A.; Penacchioni, A. V.; Peretz, U.; Perez,
   M. A.; Perez-Torres, M.; Peterson, B. M.; Petracek, V.; Pittori,
   C.; Pons, J.; Portell, J.; Possenti, A.; Postnov, K.; Poutanen, J.;
   Prakash, M.; Prandoni, I.; Le Provost, H.; Psaltis, D.; Pye, J.; Qu,
   J.; Rambaud, D.; Ramon, P.; Ramsay, G.; Rapisarda, M.; Rashevski,
   A.; Rashevskaya, I.; Ray, P. S.; Rea, N.; Reddy, S.; Reig, P.; Reina
   Aranda, M.; Remillard, R.; Reynolds, C.; Rezzolla, L.; Ribo, M.; de
   la Rie, R.; Riggio, A.; Rios, A.; Rischke, D. H.; Rodríguez-Gil, P.;
   Rodriguez, J.; Rohlfs, R.; Romano, P.; Rossi, E. M. R.; Rozanska, A.;
   Rousseau, A.; Rudak, B.; Russell, D. M.; Ryde, F.; Sabau-Graziati,
   L.; Sakamoto, T.; Sala, G.; Salvaterra, R.; Salvetti, D.; Sanna, A.;
   Sandberg, J.; Savolainen, T.; Scaringi, S.; Schaffner-Bielich, J.;
   Schatz, H.; Schee, J.; Schmid, C.; Serino, M.; Shakura, N.; Shore,
   S.; Schnittman, J. D.; Schneider, R.; Schwenk, A.; Schwope, A. D.;
   Sedrakian, A.; Seyler, J. -Y.; Shearer, A.; Slowikowska, A.; Sims,
   M.; Smith, A.; Smith, D. M.; Smith, P. J.; Sobolewska, M.; Sochora,
   V.; Soffitta, P.; Soleri, P.; Song, L.; Spencer, A.; Stamerra,
   A.; Stappers, B.; Staubert, R.; Steiner, A. W.; Stergioulas, N.;
   Stevens, A. L.; Stratta, G.; Strohmayer, T. E.; Stuchlik, Z.; Suchy,
   S.; Suleimanov, V.; Tamburini, F.; Tauris, T.; Tavecchio, F.; Tenzer,
   C.; Thielemann, F. K.; Tiengo, A.; Tolos, L.; Tombesi, F.; Tomsick, J.;
   Torok, G.; Torrejon, J. M.; Torres, D. F.; Torresi, E.; Tramacere, A.;
   Traulsen, I.; Trois, A.; Turolla, R.; Turriziani, S.; Typel, S.; Uter,
   P.; Uttley, P.; Vacchi, A.; Varniere, P.; Vaughan, S.; Vercellone,
   S.; Vietri, M.; Vincent, F. H.; Vrba, V.; Walton, D.; Wang, J.; Wang,
   Z.; Watanabe, S.; Wawrzaszek, R.; Webb, N.; Weinberg, N.; Wende, H.;
   Wheatley, P.; Wijers, R.; Wijnands, R.; Wille, M.; Wilson-Hodge,
   C. A.; Winter, B.; Walk, S. J.; Wood, K.; Woosley, S. E.; Wu, X.;
   Xu, R.; Yu, W.; Yuan, F.; Yuan, W.; Yuan, Y.; Zampa, G.; Zampa, N.;
   Zampieri, L.; Zdunik, L.; Zdziarski, A.; Zech, A.; Zhang, B.; Zhang,
   C.; Zhang, S.; Zingale, M.; Zwart, F.
2016SPIE.9905E..1RF    Altcode:
  The Large Observatory For x-ray Timing (LOFT) is a mission concept
  which was proposed to ESA as M3 and M4 candidate in the framework of the
  Cosmic Vision 2015-2025 program. Thanks to the unprecedented combination
  of effective area and spectral resolution of its main instrument and
  the uniquely large field of view of its wide field monitor, LOFT will
  be able to study the behaviour of matter in extreme conditions such
  as the strong gravitational field in the innermost regions close to
  black holes and neutron stars and the supra-nuclear densities in
  the interiors of neutron stars. The science payload is based on a
  Large Area Detector (LAD, &gt;8m<SUP>2</SUP> effective area, 2-30
  keV, 240 eV spectral resolution, 1 degree collimated field of view)
  and a Wide Field Monitor (WFM, 2-50 keV, 4 steradian field of view,
  1 arcmin source location accuracy, 300 eV spectral resolution). The
  WFM is equipped with an on-board system for bright events (e.g.,
  GRB) localization. The trigger time and position of these events are
  broadcast to the ground within 30 s from discovery. In this paper we
  present the current technical and programmatic status of the mission.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Preservation of coal-waste geochemical markers in vegetation
    and soil on self-heating coal-waste dumps in Silesia, Poland
Authors: Fabiańska, Monika J.; Ciesielczuk, Justyna; Misz-Kennan,
   Magdalena; Kruszewski, Łukasz; Kowalski, Adam
2016ChEG...76..211F    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Spectral analysis and modeling of solar flares chromospheric
    condensation
Authors: Cauzzi, Gianna; Graham, David; Kowalski, Adam; Zangrilli,
   Luca; Simoes, Paulo; Allred, Joel C.
2016SPD....47.0609C    Altcode:
  We follow up on our recent analysis of the X1.1 flare
  SOL2014-09-10T17:45, where we studied the impulsive phase dynamics
  of tens of individual flaring "kernels", in both coronal (Fe XXI)
  and chromospheric (MgII) lines observed at high cadence with IRIS.We
  concentrate here on the chromospheric aspect of the phenomenon,
  extending the analysis to multiple spectral lines of Mg II, Fe II,
  Si I, C II. We show that many flaring kernels display high velocity
  downflows in the spectra of all these chromospheric lines, exhibiting
  distinct, transient and strongly redshifted spectral components.From
  modeling using RADYN with the thick-target interpretation, the presence
  of two spectral components appears to be consistent with a high flux
  beam of accelerated electrons, characterized by a hard spectrum. In
  particular the highest energy electrons heat the denser, lower layers
  of the atmosphere, while the bulk of the beam energy, deposited higher
  in the atmosphere, is sufficient to produce chromospheric evaporation
  with a corresponding condensation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: FUV Continuum in Flare Kernels Observed by IRIS
Authors: Daw, Adrian N.; Kowalski, Adam; Allred, Joel C.; Cauzzi,
   Gianna
2016SPD....47.0604D    Altcode:
  Fits to Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS) spectra observed
  from bright kernels during the impulsive phase of solar flares are
  providing long-sought constraints on the UV/white-light continuum
  emission. Results of fits of continua plus numerous atomic and molecular
  emission lines to IRIS far ultraviolet (FUV) spectra of bright kernels
  are presented. Constraints on beam energy and cross sectional area
  are provided by cotemporaneous RHESSI, FERMI, ROSA/DST, IRIS slit-jaw
  and SDO/AIA observations, allowing for comparison of the observed IRIS
  continuum to calculations of non-thermal electron beam heating using
  the RADYN radiative-hydrodynamic loop model.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The MUSCLES Treasury Survey. I. Motivation and Overview
Authors: France, Kevin; Loyd, R. O. Parke; Youngblood, Allison;
   Brown, Alexander; Schneider, P. Christian; Hawley, Suzanne L.;
   Froning, Cynthia S.; Linsky, Jeffrey L.; Roberge, Aki; Buccino,
   Andrea P.; Davenport, James R. A.; Fontenla, Juan M.; Kaltenegger,
   Lisa; Kowalski, Adam F.; Mauas, Pablo J. D.; Miguel, Yamila; Redfield,
   Seth; Rugheimer, Sarah; Tian, Feng; Vieytes, Mariela C.; Walkowicz,
   Lucianne M.; Weisenburger, Kolby L.
2016ApJ...820...89F    Altcode: 2016arXiv160209142F
  Ground- and space-based planet searches employing radial velocity
  techniques and transit photometry have detected thousands
  of planet-hosting stars in the Milky Way. With so many planets
  discovered, the next step toward identifying potentially habitable
  planets is atmospheric characterization. While the Sun-Earth system
  provides a good framework for understanding the atmospheric chemistry
  of Earth-like planets around solar-type stars, the observational
  and theoretical constraints on the atmospheres of rocky planets in
  the habitable zones (HZs) around low-mass stars (K and M dwarfs) are
  relatively few. The chemistry of these atmospheres is controlled by the
  shape and absolute flux of the stellar spectral energy distribution
  (SED), however, flux distributions of relatively inactive low-mass
  stars are poorly understood at present. To address this issue, we
  have executed a panchromatic (X-ray to mid-IR) study of the SEDs of
  11 nearby planet-hosting stars, the Measurements of the Ultraviolet
  Spectral Characteristics of Low-mass Exoplanetary Systems (MUSCLES)
  Treasury Survey. The MUSCLES program consists visible observations from
  Hubble and ground-based observatories. Infrared and astrophysically
  inaccessible wavelengths (EUV and Lyα) are reconstructed using
  stellar model spectra to fill in gaps in the observational data. In
  this overview and the companion papers describing the MUSCLES survey,
  we show that energetic radiation (X-ray and ultraviolet) is present from
  magnetically active stellar atmospheres at all times for stars as late
  as M6. The emission line luminosities of C IV and Mg II are strongly
  correlated with band-integrated luminosities and we present empirical
  relations that can be used to estimate broadband FUV and XUV (≡X-ray +
  EUV) fluxes from individual stellar emission line measurements. We find
  that while the slope of the SED, FUV/NUV, increases by approximately
  two orders of magnitude form early K to late M dwarfs (≈0.01-1), the
  absolute FUV and XUV flux levels at their corresponding HZ distances
  are constant to within factors of a few, spanning the range 10-70 erg
  cm<SUP>-2</SUP> s<SUP>-1</SUP> in the HZ. Despite the lack of strong
  stellar activity indicators in their optical spectra, several of the
  M dwarfs in our sample show spectacular UV flare emission in their
  light curves. We present an example with flare/quiescent ultraviolet
  flux ratios of the order of 100:1 where the transition region
  energy output during the flare is comparable to the total quiescent
  luminosity of the star E<SUB>flare</SUB>(UV) ∼ 0.3 L<SUB>*</SUB>Δt
  (Δt = 1 s). Finally, we interpret enhanced L(line)/L<SUB>Bol</SUB>
  ratios for C IV and N v as tentative observational evidence for the
  interaction of planets with large planetary mass-to-orbital distance
  ratios (M<SUB>plan</SUB>/a<SUB>plan</SUB>) with the transition regions
  of their host stars. <P />Based on observations made with the NASA/ESA
  Hubble Space Telescope, obtained from the data archive at the Space
  Telescope Science Institute. STScI is operated by the Association
  of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc. under NASA contract
  NAS 5-26555.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: M Dwarf Flare Continuum Variations on One-second Timescales:
    Calibrating and Modeling of ULTRACAM Flare Color Indices
Authors: Kowalski, Adam F.; Mathioudakis, Mihalis; Hawley, Suzanne L.;
   Wisniewski, John P.; Dhillon, Vik S.; Marsh, Tom R.; Hilton, Eric J.;
   Brown, Benjamin P.
2016ApJ...820...95K    Altcode: 2016arXiv160204879K
  We present a large data set of high-cadence dMe flare light curves
  obtained with custom continuum filters on the triple-beam, high-speed
  camera system ULTRACAM. The measurements provide constraints for models
  of the near-ultraviolet (NUV) and optical continuum spectral evolution
  on timescales of ≈1 s. We provide a robust interpretation of the
  flare emission in the ULTRACAM filters using simultaneously obtained
  low-resolution spectra during two moderate-sized flares in the dM4.5e
  star YZ CMi. By avoiding the spectral complexity within the broadband
  Johnson filters, the ULTRACAM filters are shown to characterize
  bona fide continuum emission in the NUV, blue, and red wavelength
  regimes. The NUV/blue flux ratio in flares is equivalent to a Balmer
  jump ratio, and the blue/red flux ratio provides an estimate for the
  color temperature of the optical continuum emission. We present a new
  “color-color” relationship for these continuum flux ratios at the
  peaks of the flares. Using the RADYN and RH codes, we interpret the
  ULTRACAM filter emission using the dominant emission processes from a
  radiative-hydrodynamic flare model with a high nonthermal electron beam
  flux, which explains a hot, T ≈ 10<SUP>4</SUP> K, color temperature
  at blue-to-red optical wavelengths and a small Balmer jump ratio as
  observed in moderate-sized and large flares alike. We also discuss the
  high time resolution, high signal-to-noise continuum color variations
  observed in YZ CMi during a giant flare, which increased the NUV flux
  from this star by over a factor of 100. <P />Based on observations
  obtained with the Apache Point Observatory 3.5 m telescope, which is
  owned and operated by the Astrophysical Research Consortium, based on
  observations made with the William Herschel Telescope operated on the
  island of La Palma by the Isaac Newton Group in the Spanish Observatorio
  del Roque de los Muchachos of the Instituto de Astrofsica de Canarias,
  and observations, and based on observations made with the ESO Telescopes
  at the La Silla Paranal Observatory under programme ID 085.D-0501(A).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: White-light continuum in stellar flares
Authors: Kowalski, Adam F.
2016IAUS..320..259K    Altcode: 2015arXiv151105085K
  In this talk, we discuss the formation of the near-ultraviolet and
  optical continuum emission in M dwarf flares through the formation of a
  dense, heated chromospheric condensation. Results are used from a recent
  radiative-hydrodynamic model of the response of an M dwarf atmosphere
  to a high energy flux of nonthermal electrons. These models are used to
  infer the charge density and optical depth in continuum emitting flare
  layers from spectra covering the Balmer jump and optical wavelength
  regimes. Future modeling and observational directions are discussed.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A Very Bright, Very Hot, and Very Long Flaring Event from
    the Young Nearby M Dwarf Binary DG CVn
Authors: Osten, Rachel A.; Drake, Stephen Alan; Kowalski, Adam;
   Krimm, Hans A.; Page, Kim; Gazeas, Kosmas; Kennea, Jamie A.; Oates,
   Sam; Page, Mat; Gehrels, Neil
2016AAS...22714517O    Altcode:
  On April 23, 2014, the Swift satellite responded to a hard X-ray
  transient detected by its Burst Alert Telescope, which turned out to be
  a stellar flare from a nearby, young M dwarf binary DG~CVn. Observations
  at X-ray, UV and optical wavelengths of the main impulsive flare and
  subsequent smaller events reveal a complex pattern of flare events
  extending over about three weeks. We find that the X-ray spectrum of the
  primary outburst can be adequately described by either a single very
  high temperature plasma or a nonthermal thick-target bremmstrahlung
  model. By evaluating accompanying data of this event and analysis
  of a second brightening, we argue that the thermal interpretation is
  more likely on energetic grounds. The primary outburst lasted a few
  hours and produced the highest temperature thermal plasmas ever seen
  spectroscopically over the 0.3-100 keV range in a stellar flare, at
  T<SUB>X</SUB> of 300 MK. The X-ray luminosity of the main flare exceeded
  the bolometric luminosity of the brighter component (L<SUB>X</SUB>
  &gt;1.6L<SUB>bol</SUB>) for ~360 seconds. The first event was followed
  by a comparably energetic event almost a day later, whose coverage
  at X-ray and optical wavelengths enables inferences about it and the
  first event. In particular we find evidence for stellar radius-sized
  coronal loops filled with dense (n<SUB>e</SUB>&gt;10<SUP>12</SUP>
  cm<SUP>-3</SUP>) coronal plasma. The radiated energy in X-rays and white
  light reveal these first two events to be some of the most energetic
  X-ray and white light flares from an M dwarf. These structures require
  large coronal magnetic field strengths (a few kG for the first event,
  hundreds of Gauss for the second) to confine the plasma, and we thus
  predict an extremely high photospheric magnetic field strength of
  several kiloGauss.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: New Insights into White-Light Flare Emission from
    Radiative-Hydrodynamic Modeling of a Chromospheric Condensation
Authors: Kowalski, Adam F.; Hawley, S. L.; Carlsson, M.; Allred,
   J. C.; Uitenbroek, H.; Osten, R. A.; Holman, G.
2015SoPh..290.3487K    Altcode: 2015SoPh..tmp...61K; 2015arXiv150307057K
  The heating mechanism at high densities during M-dwarf flares is
  poorly understood. Spectra of M-dwarf flares in the optical and
  near-ultraviolet wavelength regimes have revealed three continuum
  components during the impulsive phase: 1) an energetically dominant
  blackbody component with a color temperature of T ≈10<SUP>4</SUP>K
  in the blue-optical, 2) a smaller amount of Balmer continuum emission
  in the near-ultraviolet at λ ≤3 646 Å, and 3) an apparent
  pseudo-continuum of blended high-order Balmer lines between λ =3
  646 Å and λ ≈3 900 Å. These properties are not reproduced by
  models that employ a typical "solar-type" flare heating level of
  ≤10<SUP>11</SUP>ergcm−<SUP>2</SUP>s−<SUP>1</SUP> in nonthermal
  electrons, and therefore our understanding of these spectra is
  limited to a phenomenological three-component interpretation. We
  present a new 1D radiative-hydrodynamic model of an M-dwarf flare
  from precipitating nonthermal electrons with a high energy flux of
  10<SUP>13</SUP>ergcm−<SUP>2</SUP>s−<SUP>1</SUP>. The simulation
  produces bright near-ultraviolet and optical continuum emission from a
  dense (n &gt;10<SUP>15</SUP>cm−<SUP>3</SUP>), hot (T ≈12 000 -13 500
  K) chromospheric condensation. For the first time, the observed color
  temperature and Balmer jump ratio are produced self-consistently in a
  radiative-hydrodynamic flare model. We find that a T ≈10<SUP>4</SUP>K
  blackbody-like continuum component and a low Balmer jump ratio result
  from optically thick Balmer (∞ →n =2 ) and Paschen recombination
  (∞ →n =3 ) radiation, and thus the properties of the flux spectrum
  are caused by blue (λ ≈4 300 Å) light escaping over a larger
  physical depth range than by red (λ ≈6 700 Å) and near-ultraviolet
  (λ ≈3 500 Å) light. To model the near-ultraviolet pseudo-continuum
  previously attributed to overlapping Balmer lines, we include the
  extra Balmer continuum opacity from Landau-Zener transitions that
  result from merged, high-order energy levels of hydrogen in a dense,
  partially ionized atmosphere. This reveals a new diagnostic of ambient
  charge density in the densest regions of the atmosphere that are heated
  during dMe and solar flares.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Hα Line Profile Asymmetries and the Chromospheric Flare
    Velocity Field
Authors: Kuridze, D.; Mathioudakis, M.; Simões, P. J. A.; Rouppe van
   der Voort, L.; Carlsson, M.; Jafarzadeh, S.; Allred, J. C.; Kowalski,
   A. F.; Kennedy, M.; Fletcher, L.; Graham, D.; Keenan, F. P.
2015ApJ...813..125K    Altcode: 2015arXiv151001877K
  The asymmetries observed in the line profiles of solar flares can
  provide important diagnostics of the properties and dynamics of the
  flaring atmosphere. In this paper the evolution of the Hα and Ca ii
  λ8542 lines are studied using high spatial, temporal, and spectral
  resolution ground-based observations of an M1.1 flare obtained with
  the Swedish 1 m Solar Telescope. The temporal evolution of the Hα
  line profiles from the flare kernel shows excess emission in the red
  wing (red asymmetry) before flare maximum and excess in the blue wing
  (blue asymmetry) after maximum. However, the Ca ii λ8542 line does
  not follow the same pattern, showing only a weak red asymmetry during
  the flare. RADYN simulations are used to synthesize spectral line
  profiles for the flaring atmosphere, and good agreement is found
  with the observations. We show that the red asymmetry observed in
  Hα is not necessarily associated with plasma downflows, and the blue
  asymmetry may not be related to plasma upflows. Indeed, we conclude
  that the steep velocity gradients in the flaring chromosphere modify
  the wavelength of the central reversal in the Hα line profile. The
  shift in the wavelength of maximum opacity to shorter and longer
  wavelengths generates the red and blue asymmetries, respectively.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Properties of Flares on GKM Stars in Kepler
Authors: Hawley, Suzanne; Davenport, James R. A.; Hebb, Leslie;
   Kowalski, Adam Francis; Wisniewski, John
2015IAUGA..2253855H    Altcode:
  We analyze Kepler observations of G and K stars and determine flare
  properties, frequencies and energies from both long and short cadence
  data. We compare these with our previous results for M dwarfs and
  investigate correlations with rotation, starspot phase, differential
  rotation and starspot evolution.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: White-light continuum in solar and stellar flares
Authors: Kowalski, Adam Francis
2015IAUGA..2257997K    Altcode:
  During solar and stellar flares, the majority of the radiated energy
  from the lower atmosphere escapes as white-light continuum emission in
  the near-ultraviolet and optical wavelength regimes. The time-dependent
  spectral energy distribution of white-light emission is important
  for assessing biomarkers in planetary atmospheres around M dwarfs
  and for constraining models of heating at the highest densities in
  flares. I will discuss the observational characteristics of white-light
  emission from recent spectroscopic observations of M dwarf flares, and
  I will describe a new interpretation of these spectra as revealed in a
  radiative-hydrodynamic model of an extreme chromospheric condensation. I
  will give an overview of the properties of white-light emission in
  solar flares and the new information obtained for the brightest solar
  flare kernels observed with IRIS.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A Unified Computational Model for Solar and Stellar Flares
Authors: Allred, Joel C.; Kowalski, Adam F.; Carlsson, Mats
2015ApJ...809..104A    Altcode: 2015arXiv150704375A
  We present a unified computational framework that can be used to
  describe impulsive flares on the Sun and on dMe stars. The models
  assume that the flare impulsive phase is caused by a beam of charged
  particles that is accelerated in the corona and propagates downward
  depositing energy and momentum along the way. This rapidly heats
  the lower stellar atmosphere causing it to explosively expand and
  dramatically brighten. Our models consist of flux tubes that extend from
  the sub-photosphere into the corona. We simulate how flare-accelerated
  charged particles propagate down one-dimensional flux tubes and heat the
  stellar atmosphere using the Fokker-Planck kinetic theory. Detailed
  radiative transfer is included so that model predictions can be
  directly compared with observations. The flux of flare-accelerated
  particles drives return currents which additionally heat the stellar
  atmosphere. These effects are also included in our models. We examine
  the impact of the flare-accelerated particle beams on model solar and
  dMe stellar atmospheres and perform parameter studies varying the
  injected particle energy spectra. We find the atmospheric response
  is strongly dependent on the accelerated particle cutoff energy and
  spectral index.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A Unified Computational Model for Solar and Stellar Flares
Authors: Allred, Joel; Kowalski, Adam; Carlsson, Mats
2015TESS....130207A    Altcode:
  We describe a unified computational framework which can be used to model
  impulsive flares on the Sun and on dMe stars. The models are constructed
  assuming that the flare impulsive phase is caused by a beam of charged
  particles (primarily electrons and protons) that is accelerated in the
  corona and propagates downward depositing energy and momentum along
  the way. This rapidly heats the lower stellar atmosphere causing it to
  explosively expand and emission to dramatically brighten. Our models
  consist of flux tubes that extend from the sub-photosphere into the
  corona. We simulate how these flare-accelerated particles propagate
  down one dimensional flux tubes and heat the stellar atmosphere
  using Fokker-Planck kinetic theory. Detailed radiative transfer is
  included so that model predictions can be directly compared with
  observations. The flux of flare-accelerated particles drives return
  currents which additionally heat the stellar atmosphere, and these
  effects are also included in our models. We examine the impact of
  the flare-accelerated particle beams on model solar and dMe stellar
  atmospheres and perform parameter studies varying the injected particle
  energy spectra. We find the atmospheric response is strongly dependent
  on the accelerated particle cutoff energy and spectral index.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: State-of-the-Art Observations and Modeling of Stellar Flares
Authors: Kowalski, Adam F.; Hawley, Suzanne L.
2015HiA....16...99K    Altcode:
  Flares are observed on a wide variety of stellar types, ranging from
  closely orbiting binary systems consisting of an evolved member (RS
  CVn's) and young, nearby super-active M dwarfs (dMe's). The timescales
  and energies of flares span many orders of magnitude and typically
  far exceed the scales of even the largest solar flares observed. In
  particular, the active M dwarfs produce an energetic signature in
  the near-UV and optical continuum, which is often referred to as
  the white-light continuum. White-light emission has been studied in
  Johnson UBVR filters during a few large-amplitude flares, and the best
  emission mechanism that fits the broadband color distribution is a
  T~10<SUP>4</SUP> K blackbody (Hawley &amp; Fisher 1992). Time-resolved
  blue spectra have revealed a consistent picture, with little or
  no Balmer jump and a smoothly rising continuum toward the near-UV
  (Hawley &amp; Pettersen 1991). However, the most recent self-consistent
  radiative-hydrodynamic (RHD) models, which use a solar-type flare
  heating function from accelerated, nonthermal electrons, do not
  reproduce this emission spectrum. Instead, these models predict that
  the white-light is dominated by Balmer continuum emission from Hydrogen
  recombination in the chromosphere (Allred et al. 2006). Moreover, Allred
  et al. (2006) showed that the Johnson colors of the model prediction
  exhibit a broadband distribution similar to a blackbody with T~9000 K.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Serendipitous Discovery of a Dwarf Nova in the Kepler Field
    Near the G Dwarf KIC 5438845
Authors: Brown, Alexander; Neff, James E.; Ayres, Thomas R.; Kowalski,
   Adam; Hawley, Suzanne; Berdyugina, Svetlana; Harper, Graham M.;
   Korhonen, Heidi; Piskunov, Nikolai; Saar, Steven; Walkowicz, Lucianne;
   Wells, Mark A.
2015AJ....149...67B    Altcode:
  The Kepler satellite provides a unique window into stellar temporal
  variability by observing a wide variety of stars with multi-year,
  near-continuous, high precision, optical photometric time series. While
  most Kepler targets are faint stars with poorly known physical
  properties, many unexpected discoveries should result from a long
  photometric survey of such a large area of sky. During our Kepler
  Guest Observer programs that monitored late-type stars for starspot and
  flaring variability, we discovered a previously unknown dwarf nova that
  lies within a few arcseconds of the mid-G dwarf star KIC 5438845. This
  dwarf nova underwent nine outbursts over a 4 year time span. The two
  largest outbursts lasted ∼17-18 days and show strong modulations with
  a 110.8 minute period and a declining amplitude during the outburst
  decay phase. These properties are characteristic of an SU UMa-type
  cataclysmic variable. By analogy with other dwarf nova light curves,
  we associate the 110.8 minute (1.847 hr) period with the superhump
  period, close to but slightly longer than the orbital period of the
  binary. No precursor outbursts are seen before the super-outbursts
  and the overall super-outburst morphology corresponds to Osaki &amp;
  Meyer “Case B” outbursts, which are initiated when the outer edge
  of the disk reaches the tidal truncation radius. “Case B” outbursts
  are rare within the Kepler light curves of dwarf novae. The dwarf nova
  is undergoing relatively slow mass transfer, as evidenced by the long
  intervals between outbursts, but the mass transfer rate appears to
  be steady, because the smaller “normal” outbursts show a strong
  correlation between the integrated outburst energy and the elapsed time
  since the previous outburst. At super-outburst maximum the system was
  at V ∼ 18, but in quiescence it is fainter than V ∼ 22, which will
  make any detailed quiescent follow-up of this system difficult.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Kepler Flares III: Stellar Activity on GJ 1245A and B
Authors: Lurie, John C.; Davenport, James R. A.; Hawley, Suzanne L.;
   Wilkinson, Tessa D.; Wisniewski, John P.; Kowalski, Adam F.; Hebb,
   Leslie
2015ApJ...800...95L    Altcode: 2014arXiv1412.6109L
  We present the flare occurrence rates and starspot evolution for GJ
  1245A and B, two active M5 stars, based on nine months of Kepler short
  cadence observations, and four years of nearly continuous long cadence
  observations. The A component is separated from the B component by 7”,
  and the stars are not resolved in the Kepler pipeline processing due
  to Kepler's large plate scale of 4” pixel<SUP>-1</SUP>. Analyzing
  the target pixel data, we have generated separate light curves for
  components A and B using the PyKE pixel response function modeling
  procedures, and note the effects of CCD saturation and nonlinear
  response to high-energy flares. In our sample, GJ 1245A and B exhibit
  an average of 3.0 and 2.6 flares per day, respectively. We introduce
  a new metric, L<SUB>fl</SUB> /L <SUB>Kp</SUB>, to compare the flare
  rates between stars, and discuss this in the context of GJ 1245A and
  B. Both stars exhibit starspot features that evolve on long timescales,
  with the slower rotating B component showing evidence of differential
  rotation. Intriguingly, the angular separation between the A and B
  component photocenters decreases during the four years of observations
  in a manner consistent with a shift in the position of the A photocenter
  due to the orbit of its unseen M8 companion (GJ 1245C), which is ~94%
  less bright. Among the most detailed photometric studies of fully
  convective M dwarfs in a multiple system, these results provide an
  important constraint on stellar age-rotation-activity models.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Time-Resolved Near-Ultraviolet Flare Spectra with the Hubble
    Space Telescope / Cosmic Origins Spectrograph
Authors: Kowalski, Adam F.; Hawley, Suzanne L.; Johns-Krull,
   Christopher M.; Schmidt, Sarah J.; Brown, Alexander; Wisniewski, John
   P.; Davenport, James R. A.; Farina, Cecilia; Pietro Gentile Fusillo,
   Nicola; Xilouris, Manolis; Mathioudakis, Mihalis; Osten, Rachel A.;
   Holtzman, Jon A.; Phan-Bao, Ngoc; Valenti, Jeff A.; Walkowicz, Lucianne
2015AAS...22544903K    Altcode:
  A large amount of the radiated energy during solar and stellar flares
  is emitted as white-light continuum emission, extending through the
  ultraviolet and optical wavelength regimes. Broadband photometry
  and optical spectral observations of M dwarf flares suggest that the
  white-light peak is located in the near-ultraviolet wavelength regime
  similar to a blackbody with T ~ 10,000 K, whereas radiative-hydrodynamic
  models using a solar-type flare heating mechanism (nonthermal electrons
  with a flux ~ 10<SUP>11</SUP> erg / s / cm<SUP>2</SUP> accelerated in
  the corona) predict that the peak lies at redder wavelengths at the
  head of the Balmer continuum. We have completed a successful flare
  monitoring campaign on the dM4e star GJ 1243, in order to constrain
  the time-evolution of the peak of the white-light continuum. The
  campaign took place over 12 hours on Aug 31/Sept 1, 2014, and included
  optical monitoring from nine ground-based telescopes as the Hubble
  Space Telescope recorded time-tagged spectra in the near-ultraviolet
  (2450-2840 Å) with the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph. Two flares occurred
  during the HST observations, and we show preliminary results relating
  the continuum and line (Fe II and Mg II) emission to the simultaneous
  ground-based optical spectra and photometry. This dataset provides new
  constraints for radiative-hydrodynamic modeling of the lower flaring
  atmosphere in addition to input for models of the effects of flares
  on biomarkers and habitability around M dwarfs.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Optical Spectral Observations of a Flickering White-light
    Kernel in a C1 Solar Flare
Authors: Kowalski, Adam F.; Cauzzi, Gianna; Fletcher, Lyndsay
2015ApJ...798..107K    Altcode: 2014arXiv1411.0770K
  We analyze optical spectra of a two-ribbon, long-duration
  C1.1 flare that occurred on 2011 August 18 within AR 11271
  (SOL2011-08-18T15:15). The impulsive phase of the flare was observed
  with a comprehensive set of space-borne and ground-based instruments,
  which provide a range of unique diagnostics of the lower flaring
  atmosphere. Here we report the detection of enhanced continuum emission,
  observed in low-resolution spectra from 3600 Å to 4550 Å acquired
  with the Horizontal Spectrograph at the Dunn Solar Telescope. A small,
  &lt;=0.”5 (10<SUP>15</SUP> cm<SUP>2</SUP>) penumbral/umbral kernel
  brightens repeatedly in the optical continuum and chromospheric
  emission lines, similar to the temporal characteristics of the hard
  X-ray variation as detected by the Gamma-ray Burst Monitor on the Fermi
  spacecraft. Radiative-hydrodynamic flare models that employ a nonthermal
  electron beam energy flux high enough to produce the optical contrast
  in our flare spectra would predict a large Balmer jump in emission,
  indicative of hydrogen recombination radiation from the upper flare
  chromosphere. However, we find no evidence of such a Balmer jump in
  the bluemost spectral region of the continuum excess. Just redward of
  the expected Balmer jump, we find evidence of a "blue continuum bump"
  in the excess emission which may be indicative of the merging of the
  higher order Balmer lines. The large number of observational constraints
  provides a springboard for modeling the blue/optical emission for this
  particular flare with radiative-hydrodynamic codes, which are necessary
  to understand the opacity effects for the continuum and emission line
  radiation at these wavelengths.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Continued Optical to Mid-Infrared Evolution of V838
    Monocerotis
Authors: Loebman, S. R.; Wisniewski, J. P.; Schmidt, S. J.; Kowalski,
   A. F.; Barry, R. K.; Bjorkman, K. S.; Hammel, H. B.; Hawley, S. L.;
   Hebb, L.; Kasliwal, M. M.; Lynch, D. K.; Russell, R. W.; Sitko, M. L.;
   Szkody, P.
2015AJ....149...17L    Altcode: 2014arXiv1409.2513L
  The eruptive variable V838 Monocerotis (V838 Mon) gained notoriety in
  2002 when it brightened nine magnitudes in a series of three outbursts
  and then rapidly evolved into an extremely cool supergiant. We
  present optical, near-infrared (near-IR), and mid-IR spectroscopic
  and photometric observations of V838 Mon obtained between 2008 and
  2012 at the Apache Point Observatory 3.5 m, NASA IRTF 3 m, and Gemini
  South 8 m telescopes. We contemporaneously analyze the optical and IR
  spectroscopic properties of V838 Mon to arrive at a revised spectral
  type L3 supergiant and effective temperature {{T}<SUB>eff</SUB>}∼
  2000-2200 K. Because there are no existing optical observational
  data for L supergiants, we speculate that V838 Mon may represent
  the prototype for L supergiants in this wavelength regime. We find
  a low level of Hα emission present in the system, consistent with
  interaction between V838 Mon and its B3V binary; however, we cannot
  rule out a stellar collision as the genesis event, which could result
  in the observed Hα activity. Based upon a two-component blackbody
  fit to all wavelengths of our data, we conclude that, as of 2009,
  a shell of ejecta surrounded V838 Mon at a radius of R=263+/- 10 AU
  with a temperature of T=285+/- 2 K. This result is consistent with
  IR interferometric observations from the same era and predictions
  from the Lynch et al. model of the expanding system, which provides a
  simple framework for understanding this complicated system. <P />This
  publication is partially based on observations obtained with the Apache
  Point Observatory 3.5 m telescope, which is owned and operated by the
  Astrophysical Research Consortium.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Stellar flares observed by LOFT: implications for the physics
    of coronae and for the "space weather" environment of extrasolar
    planets
Authors: Drake, S. A.; Behar, E.; Doyle, J. G.; Güdel, M.; Hamaguchi,
   K.; Kowalski, A. F.; Maccarone, T.; Osten, R. A.; Peretz, U.; Wolk,
   S. J.
2015arXiv150102771D    Altcode:
  This is a White Paper in support of the mission concept of the Large
  Observatory for X-ray Timing (LOFT), proposed as a medium-sized ESA
  mission. We discuss the potential of LOFT for the study of stellar
  flares. For a summary, we refer to the paper.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Upgrading the Solar-Stellar Connection: News about activity
    in Cool Stars
Authors: Gunther, H. M.; Poppenhaeger, K.; Testa, P.; Borgniet, S.;
   Brun, A. S.; Cegla, H. M.; Garraffo, C.; Kowalski, A.; Shapiro, A.;
   Shkolnik, E.; Spada, F.; Vidotto, A. A.
2015csss...18...25G    Altcode: 2014arXiv1408.3068G
  In this splinter session, ten speakers presented results on solar
  and stellar activity and how the two fields are connected. This was
  followed by a lively discussion and supplemented by short, one-minute
  highlight talks. The talks presented new theoretical and observational
  results on mass accretion on the Sun, the activity rate of flare stars,
  the evolution of the stellar magnetic field on time scales of a single
  cycle and over the lifetime of a star, and two different approaches
  to model the radial-velocity jitter in cool stars that is due to the
  granulation on the surface. Talks and discussion showed how much the
  interpretation of stellar activity data relies on the sun and how the
  large number of objects available in stellar studies can extend the
  parameter range of activity models.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Kepler Flares. II. The Temporal Morphology of White-light
    Flares on GJ 1243
Authors: Davenport, James R. A.; Hawley, Suzanne L.; Hebb, Leslie;
   Wisniewski, John P.; Kowalski, Adam F.; Johnson, Emily C.; Malatesta,
   Michael; Peraza, Jesus; Keil, Marcus; Silverberg, Steven M.; Jansen,
   Tiffany C.; Scheffler, Matthew S.; Berdis, Jodi R.; Larsen, Daniel M.;
   Hilton, Eric J.
2014ApJ...797..122D    Altcode: 2014arXiv1411.3723D
  We present the largest sample of flares ever compiled for a single M
  dwarf, the active M4 star GJ 1243. Over 6100 individual flare events,
  with energies ranging from 10<SUP>29</SUP> to 10<SUP>33</SUP> erg, are
  found in 11 months of 1 minute cadence data from Kepler. This sample
  is unique for its completeness and dynamic range. We have developed
  automated tools for finding flares in short-cadence Kepler light curves,
  and performed extensive validation and classification of the sample by
  eye. From this pristine sample of flares we generate a median flare
  template. This template shows that two exponential cooling phases
  are present during the white-light flare decay, providing fundamental
  constraints for models of flare physics. The template is also used as
  a basis function to decompose complex multi-peaked flares, allowing us
  to study the energy distribution of these events. Only a small number
  of flare events are not well fit by our template. We find that complex,
  multi-peaked flares occur in over 80% of flares with a duration of 50
  minutes or greater. The underlying distribution of flare durations for
  events 10 minutes and longer appears to follow a broken power law. Our
  results support the idea that sympathetic flaring may be responsible
  for some complex flare events.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Kepler Flares. I. Active and Inactive M Dwarfs
Authors: Hawley, Suzanne L.; Davenport, James R. A.; Kowalski, Adam F.;
   Wisniewski, John P.; Hebb, Leslie; Deitrick, Russell; Hilton, Eric J.
2014ApJ...797..121H    Altcode: 2014arXiv1410.7779H
  We analyzed Kepler short-cadence M dwarf observations. Spectra from the
  Astrophysical Research Consortium 3.5 m telescope identify magnetically
  active (Hα in emission) stars. The active stars are of mid-M spectral
  type, have numerous flares, and have well-defined rotational modulation
  due to starspots. The inactive stars are of early M type, exhibit less
  starspot signature, and have fewer flares. A Kepler to U-band energy
  scaling allows comparison of the Kepler flare frequency distributions
  with previous ground-based data. M dwarfs span a large range of flare
  frequency and energy, blurring the distinction between active and
  inactive stars designated solely by the presence of Hα. We analyzed
  classical and complex (multiple peak) flares on GJ 1243, finding strong
  correlations between flare energy, amplitude, duration, and decay time,
  with only a weak dependence on rise time. Complex flares last longer and
  have higher energy at the same amplitude, and higher energy flares are
  more likely to be complex. A power law fits the energy distribution for
  flares with log E<SUB>K_p</SUB> \gt 31 erg, but the predicted number of
  low-energy flares far exceeds the number observed, at energies where
  flares are still easily detectable, indicating that the power-law
  distribution may flatten at low energy. There is no correlation of
  flare occurrence or energy with starspot phase, the flare waiting
  time distribution is consistent with flares occurring randomly in
  time, and the energies of consecutive flares are uncorrelated. These
  observations support a scenario where many independent active regions
  on the stellar surface are contributing to the observed flare rate.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Continuum Emission from a Microflare Kernel Observed by IRIS
Authors: Daw, A. N.; Kowalski, A. F.; Wuelser, J. P.; Cauzzi, G.;
   Allred, J. C.; Christe, S.
2014AGUFMSH51C4166D    Altcode:
  Fits to Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS) spectra observed
  from a bright kernel during the impulsive phase of a solar microflare
  (GOES class B9) are presented, providing long-sought constraints on
  the UV/white-light continuum emission during flares. Constraints on
  beam energy and cross sectional area are provided by cotemporaneous
  RHESSI and SDO/AIA 1700 A observations, respectively, allowing for
  comparison of the observed IRIS continuum to calculations of non-thermal
  electron beam heating using the RADYN radiative-hydrodynamic loop
  model. Implications for flare energy release are discussed.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Very Bright, Very Hot and Very Long: Swift Observations of
    the DG CVn "Superflare" of April 23rd, 2014
Authors: Drake, Stephen Alan; Osten, Rachel A.; Page, Kim L; Kennea,
   Jamie A; Oates, Samantha R; Krimm, Hans A; Gehrels, Neil; Page,
   Mathew J; Kowalski, Adam
2014HEAD...1440406D    Altcode:
  On April 23rd this year, one of the 2 stars in the close visual binary
  dM4e system DG CVn flared to a level bright enough 300 milliCrab in the
  15-150 keV band) that it triggered the Swift Burst Alert Telescope. Two
  minutes later, after Swift had slewed to the direction of this source,
  the Swift X-ray Telescope (XRT) and the Ultraviolet Optical Telescope
  (UVOT) commenced observing this flare. These observations continued
  (intermittently) for about 20 days and yielded a fascinating case
  history of this colossal event, the decay of which took more than a
  week in the UV and soft X-ray regions, and included several smaller
  superimposed secondary flares. The peak 0.3-10 keV luminosity observed
  by the XRT of 1.9e32 erg/s at the 18 pc distance of this system is
  1.5 times the 'normal' combined systemic bolometric luminosity of
  1.3e32 erg/s, making this event a super-bolometric flare similar
  to the 2008 flare of EV Lac (also detected by Swift). The BAT and
  XRT spectra of this flare in the first 6 minutes indicate that the
  emission was dominated by very hot (&gt;&gt;10 keV) plasma and/or a
  non-thermal power-law emission. This flare is arguably the longest,
  most X-ray luminous and hottest flare ever seen for an M dwarf in the
  solar neighborhood, and is reminiscent of the 9 days long flare of the
  RS CVn binary CF Tuc detected by ROSAT. We discuss how these exceptional
  characteristics may be related to the known properties of this system,
  specifically to its youth (30 Myr) and rapid rotation (55 km/s).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Characterizing NUV Flare Radiation from M Dwarfs
Authors: Kowalski, Adam
2014koa..prop..432K    Altcode:
  We seek to locate the peak of the white-light continuum during an M
  dwarf flare using combined data from HST and Keck. The observations will
  be critical for constraining radiative-hydrodynamic flare models that
  use a solar-type heating function and for simulations of habitability
  around M dwarfs.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Atmospheric Response to High Fluxes of Nonthermal Electrons
    during M Dwarf Flares
Authors: Kowalski, Adam; Allred, J. C.; Carlsson, M.; Hawley, S. L.;
   Holman, G. D.; Mathioudakis, M.; Osten, R. A.; Uitenbroek, H.
2014AAS...22315117K    Altcode:
  Flares are thought to be the result of magnetic fields in the stellar
  corona that undergo reconnection and accelerate charged particles
  into the lower atmosphere. Spectra of M dwarf flares in the optical
  and near-ultraviolet wavelength regimes can be used to constrain the
  heating mechanism of the lower stellar atmosphere. These observations
  show several ubiquitous properties of the continuum emission, which
  is not reproduced by models that use typical “solar-type” heating
  functions. We present results from a grid of new flare models using the
  RADYN code, which simultaneously calculates the radiative transfer and
  hydrodynamics on short timescales. We explore the atmospheric response
  to a short ~2 second burst of a very high heating rate from nonthermal
  electrons using a solar-type heating function, and we propose a new
  “M dwarf-type” heating variation that explains a range of observed
  spectral properties, such as ~10,000 K blackbody emission and a smooth
  continuum across the Balmer jump wavelength (3646A).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Hot-Wiring Flare Stars: Optical Flare Rates and Properties
    from Time-Domain Surveys
Authors: Kowalski, A.
2014htu..conf...15K    Altcode:
  Flares are thought to result from the reconnection of magnetic fields in
  the upper layers (coronae) of stellar atmospheres. The highly dynamic
  atmospheric response produces radiation across the electromagnetic
  spectrum, from the radio to X-rays, on a range of timescales, from
  seconds to days. Due to their high flare rates and energies combined
  with a large contrast against the background quiescent emission, the
  low-mass M dwarfs are the primary target for studying flare rates in the
  Galaxy. However, high-precision monitoring campaigns using Kepler and
  the Hubble Space Telescope have recently revealed important information
  on the flare rates of earlier- type, more massive stars. In this talk,
  I will focus on the properties of flares and flare stars in the optical
  and near-ultraviolet wavelength regimes as revealed from time-domain
  surveys, such as the repeat observations of the Sloan Digital Sky
  Surveys Stripe 82. I will discuss the importance of spectroscopic
  follow-up characterization of the quiescent and flare emission, and I
  will highlight new radiative-hydrodynamic modeling results that have
  enhanced our understanding of impulsive phase U-band flare emission.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Taking the Temperature of Explosive Stellar Flares
Authors: Kowalski, Adam
2013hst..prop13323K    Altcode:
  State-of-the-art radiative hydrodynamic models which employ solar
  flare heating mechanisms are not able to produce a key observational
  component of stellar flares, hot blackbody emission, indicating that
  there is significant physics missing from our understanding of energy
  transport and radiation during stellar flares. Efforts to resolve this
  discrepancy using blue-optical spectrophotometry have proven to be
  insufficient to accurately constrain the temperature of this blackbody
  emission and more generally the depth in the atmosphere at which this
  emission originates. We propose to rectify this shortcoming by using
  HST/COS to measure the flare blackbody temperatures on the active
  dM4e star GJ 1243, a star whose frequency of moderate-size flares is
  extremely well characterized thanks to our Kepler GO-2/3 programs.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Decaying Long-period Oscillation of a Stellar Megaflare
Authors: Anfinogentov, S.; Nakariakov, V. M.; Mathioudakis, M.;
   Van Doorsselaere, T.; Kowalski, A. F.
2013ApJ...773..156A    Altcode:
  We analyze and interpret the oscillatory signal in the decay phase of
  the U-band light curve of a stellar megaflare observed on 2009 January
  16 on the dM4.5e star YZ CMi. The oscillation is well approximated
  by an exponentially decaying harmonic function. The period of the
  oscillation is found to be 32 minutes, the decay time about 46 minutes,
  and the relative amplitude 15%. As this observational signature is
  typical of the longitudinal oscillations observed in solar flares at
  extreme ultraviolet and radio wavelengths, associated with standing
  slow magnetoacoustic waves, we suggest that this megaflare may be of a
  similar nature. In this scenario, macroscopic variations of the plasma
  parameters in the oscillations modulate the ejection of non-thermal
  electrons. The phase speed of the longitudinal (slow magnetoacoustic)
  waves in the flaring loop or arcade, the tube speed, of about 230
  km s<SUP>-1</SUP> would require a loop length of about 200 Mm. Other
  mechanisms, such as standing kink oscillations, are also considered.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The properties of flare kernels observed by the Dunn Solar
    Telescope
Authors: Fletcher, Lyndsay; Kowalski, A.; Cauzzi, G.; Hawley, S. L.;
   Hudson, H. S.
2013SPD....44...67F    Altcode:
  We report on a campaign at the Dunn Solar Telescope which resulted in
  successful imaging and spectroscopic observations of a C1.1 solar flare
  on 18th August 2011. This flare exhibited ribbons with complicated
  fine structure at the resolution of the DST/IBIS instrument, and a
  number of bright kernels with sizes comparable to the smallest scales
  sampled by IBIS, around 2-4 pixels (0."3-0."6) FWHM. We focus on these
  bright kernels, describing their spatial characteristics in the core
  and wing of H alpha and Ca II 8542, and in the UV and EUV with SDO. We
  also show preliminary broad-band spectroscopy of the kernels which may
  demonstrate the presence of an optical continuum in this small flare.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Time-resolved Properties and Global Trends in dMe Flares from
    Simultaneous Photometry and Spectra
Authors: Kowalski, Adam F.; Hawley, Suzanne L.; Wisniewski, John P.;
   Osten, Rachel A.; Hilton, Eric J.; Holtzman, Jon A.; Schmidt, Sarah
   J.; Davenport, James R. A.
2013ApJS..207...15K    Altcode: 2013arXiv1307.2099K
  We present a homogeneous analysis of line and continuum emission
  from simultaneous high-cadence spectra and photometry covering
  near-ultraviolet and optical wavelengths for 20 M dwarf flares. These
  data were obtained to study the white-light continuum components at
  bluer and redder wavelengths than the Balmer jump. Our goals were
  to break the degeneracy between emission mechanisms that have been
  fit to broadband colors of flares and to provide constraints for
  radiative-hydrodynamic (RHD) flare models that seek to reproduce the
  white-light flare emission. The main results from the analysis are
  the following: (1) the detection of Balmer continuum (in emission)
  that is present during all flares and with a wide range of relative
  contributions to the continuum flux at bluer wavelengths than the
  Balmer jump; (2) a blue continuum at flare maximum that is linearly
  decreasing with wavelength from λ = 4000-4800 Å, indicative of hot,
  blackbody emission with typical temperatures of T <SUB>BB</SUB>
  ~ 9000-14, 000 K (3) a redder continuum apparent at wavelengths
  longer than Hβ (λ &gt;~ 4900 Å) which becomes relatively more
  important to the energy budget during the late gradual phase. The hot
  blackbody component and redder continuum component have been detected
  in previous studies of flares. However, we have found that although
  the hot blackbody emission component is relatively well-represented
  by a featureless, single-temperature Planck function, this component
  includes absorption features and has a continuum shape strikingly
  similar to the spectrum of an A-type star as directly observed in
  our flare spectra. New model constraints are presented for the time
  evolution among the hydrogen Balmer lines and between Ca II K and the
  blackbody continuum emission. We calculate Balmer jump flux ratios and
  compare to the solar-type flare heating predictions from RHD models. The
  model ratios are too large and the blue-optical (λ = 4000-4800 Å)
  slopes are too red in both the impulsive and gradual decay phases of
  all 20 flares. This discrepancy implies that further work is needed
  to understand the heating at high column mass during dMe flares. <P
  />Based on observations obtained with the Apache Point Observatory
  3.5 m telescope, which is owned and operated by the Astrophysical
  Research Consortium.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: VizieR Online Data Catalog: M dwarf flare spectra (Kowalski+,
    2013)
Authors: Kowalski, A. F.; Hawley, S. L.; Wisniewski, J. P.; Osten,
   R. A.; Hilton, E. J.; Holtzman, J. A.; Schmidt, S. J.; Davenport,
   J. R. A.
2013yCat..22070015K    Altcode:
  The spectral data are contained in FITS files (to be read into IDL with
  mrdfits.pro), and the photometry data are contained in two column .dat
  files. <P />Spectra were obtained with the Dual-Imaging Spectrograph
  (DIS) on the ARC 3.5m telescope at the Apache Point Observatory (APO)
  in low-resolution. The observing log for each target star is given in
  Table 2. <P />(5 data files).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Failed filament eruption inside a coronal mass ejection in
    active region 11121
Authors: Kuridze, D.; Mathioudakis, M.; Kowalski, A. F.; Keys, P. H.;
   Jess, D. B.; Balasubramaniam, K. S.; Keenan, F. P.
2013A&A...552A..55K    Altcode: 2013arXiv1302.5931K
  <BR /> Aims: We study the formation and evolution of a failed filament
  eruption observed in NOAA active region 11121 near the southeast limb on
  November 6, 2010. <BR /> Methods: We used a time series of SDO/AIA 304,
  171, 131, 193, 335, and 94 Å images, SDO/HMI magnetograms, as well as
  ROSA and ISOON Hα images to study the erupting active region. <BR />
  Results: We identify coronal loop arcades associated with a quadrupolar
  magnetic configuration, and show that the expansion and cancellation
  of the central loop arcade system over the filament is followed by
  the eruption of the filament. The erupting filament reveals a clear
  helical twist and develops the same sign of writhe in the form of
  inverse γ-shape. <BR /> Conclusions: The observations support the
  "magnetic breakout" process in which the eruption is triggered by
  quadrupolar reconnection in the corona. We propose that the formation
  mechanism of the inverse γ-shape flux rope is the magnetohydrodynamic
  helical kink instability. The eruption has failed because of the
  large-scale, closed, overlying magnetic loop arcade that encloses
  the active region. <P />Movies are available in electronic form at
  <A href="http://www.aanda.org">http://www.aanda.org</A>

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: MMT Hectochelle Spectral Variability of Active Late-type
    Stars in the Kepler Field (2013A)
Authors: Brown, Alexander; Walkowicz, Lucianne; Saar, Steven; Hawley,
   Suzanne; Kowalski, Adam; Furesz, Gabor; Piskunov, Nikolai
2013noao.prop..286B    Altcode:
  We have on-going it Kepler photometric monitoring of over 300 active
  late-type (mid-A - K) stars as part of our Cycles 1/2/3/4 Guest
  Observer (GO) programs with the aim of studying starspot evolution,
  differential rotation, activity cycles, and flares. We propose to
  use the MMT Hectochelle multiobject spectrograph to observe over
  140 of these stars to determine a range of basic physical properties
  for the stars, such as radial velocity variations due to binarity,
  chromospheric activity levels from Ca II H+K and H(alpha), projected
  rotational velocities for comparison to the rotational periods
  measured directly by it Kepler, age/youth as indicated by Li I, and
  better effective temperature and luminosity estimates. In addition,
  to provide a superior sample for statistical studies another 800 GKM
  dwarf stars showing either starspot modulation from the it Kepler
  Team's data or from our deep XMM X-ray survey will be observed using
  the unassigned fibers in each field. These measurements require the
  32,000 spectral resolution provided by Hectochelle, which is hard to
  obtain efficiently for 13-15th magnitude stars any other way.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Non-thermal processes in coronae and beyond
Authors: Poppenhaeger, K.; Günther, H. M.; Beiersdorfer, P.;
   Brickhouse, N. S.; Carter, J. A.; Hudson, H. S.; Kowalski, A.; Lalitha,
   S.; Miceli, M.; Wolk, S. J.
2013AN....334..101P    Altcode: 2013csss...17..101P; 2012arXiv1210.2960P
  This contribution summarizes the splinter session “Non-thermal
  processes in coronae and beyond” held at the Cool Stars 17 workshop
  in Barcelona in 2012. It covers new developments in high energy
  non-thermal effects in the Earth's exosphere, solar and stellar flares,
  the diffuse emission in star forming regions and reviews the state
  and the challenges of the underlying atomic databases.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A Large Sample of Magnetically-Active Stars Observed With
    Kepler
Authors: Wells, Mark; Neff, J. E.; Brown, A.; Ayres, T. R.; Basri,
   G. S.; Berdyugina, S.; Harper, G.; Hawley, S. L.; Korhonen, H.;
   Kowalski, A.; Micela, G.; Piskunov, N. E.; Ramsey, L. W.; Saar, S. H.;
   Walkowicz, L. M.
2013AAS...22135415W    Altcode:
  We have observed about 325 stars in our Kepler Guest Observer
  programs (Cycles 1 through 4). For most of these targets, we are
  analyzing extremely high-precision light curves that have been
  continuously sampled every 30 minutes for up to 3 years. Our sample
  of candidate magnetically-active stars was selected primarily using
  GALEX colors. Starspots, pulsations, and variations due to eclipsing
  and contact binaries combine to produce a rich variety of light
  curves. We have developed semi-automated procedures to characterize
  this variability and thus to classify the targets and identify the
  physical mechanisms that dominate their Kepler light curves. We will
  describe these procedures and discuss the range of physical properties
  covered by our final classification scheme. We are using this Kepler
  database of variability over timescales of minutes to years to provide
  diagnostics of flares, starspot formation, evolution, migration, and
  ultimately of stellar cycles in general. This work contains results
  obtained using the NASA Kepler satellite and from the Apache Point
  Observatory, the MMT (using NOAO community access time), and the
  Hobby-Eberly Telescope. Funding is provided by NASA Kepler grants
  NNX10AC51G, NNX11AC79G, and NNX12AC85G to the University of Colorado,
  by NSF grant AST-1109695 to the College of Charleston, and by a grant
  from the South Carolina Space Grant consortium.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Time-resolved properties and global trends in dMe flares from
    simultaneous photometry and spectra
Authors: Kowalski, Adam Francis
2013PhDT.......670K    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Young Star Populations in the Kepler Field
Authors: Brown, Alexander; Neff, J. E.; Wells, M.; Saar, S.; Furesz,
   G.; Walkowicz, L. M.; Ayres, T. R.; Basri, G. S.; Berdyugina, S.;
   Harper, G.; Hawley, S. L.; Korhonen, H.; Kowalski, A.; Micela, G.;
   Piskunov, N. E.; Ramsey, L. W.
2013AAS...22135414B    Altcode:
  The Kepler satellite is providing spectacular optical photometric
  light-curves of unprecedented precision and duration that routinely
  allow detailed studies of stellar magnetic activity on late-type stars
  that were difficult previously. Kepler provides multi-year duration
  light-curves that allow investigation of how activity phenomena --
  such as the growth, migration, and decay of star-spots, differential
  rotation, activity cycles, and flaring -- operate on a wide variety of
  single and binary stars. The 105 square degree Kepler Field contains
  tens of thousands of late-type stars showing rotational modulation due
  to star-spots with periods ranging from one day to a “solar-like”
  month. Short rotation periods and high levels of magnetic activity are
  strongly correlated. However, there are only two basic reasons why stars
  with rotation periods of a few days possess such high angular momentum
  --- either they are close binaries or they are young stars. During
  Kepler GO Cycles 1 through 4 we have been studying the Long-cadence
  (30 minute sampling) photometry of hundreds of active late-type stars
  and as an absolutely essential complement we have been obtaining high
  resolution optical spectra to understand the physical properties of
  these stars. We present results from a spectroscopic survey using the
  MMT Hectochelle multi-object echelle of 4 square degrees of the Kepler
  Field. We have discovered a significant population of young stars with
  Li I absorption indicating ages of ~100 Myr or less at a spatial density
  of at least 20 stars per square degree. Our detected young star sample
  comprises at least 80 stars and represents a dramatic advance compared
  to the previously known sample over the full Kepler Field of three
  stars in this age range. Roughly one sixth of the stars observed are
  young and a similar number short-period binaries based on 2-4 radial
  velocities. We show how the rotational properties of the stars and their
  physical properties are related. This work is based on data obtained
  with the NASA Kepler satellite and the MMT Hectochelle spectrograph
  using NOAO community access time. Support by NASA Kepler grants to the
  University of Colorado and by NSF grant to the College of Charleston.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: DRAFTS: A Deep, Rapid Archival Flare Transient Search in the
    Galactic Bulge
Authors: Osten, Rachel A.; Kowalski, Adam; Sahu, Kailash; Hawley,
   Suzanne L.
2012ApJ...754....4O    Altcode: 2012arXiv1205.1485O
  We utilize the Sagittarius Window Eclipsing Extrasolar Planet Search
  Hubble Space Telescope/Advanced Camera for Surveys data set for a Deep
  Rapid Archival Flare Transient Search to constrain the flare rate toward
  the older stellar population in the Galactic bulge. During seven days
  of monitoring 229,293 stars brighter than V = 29.5, we find evidence for
  flaring activity in 105 stars between V = 20 and V = 28. We divided the
  sample into non-variable stars and variable stars whose light curves
  contain large-scale variability. The flare rate on variable stars is
  ~700 times that of non-variable stars, with a significant correlation
  between the amount of underlying stellar variability and peak flare
  amplitude. The flare energy loss rates are generally higher than
  those of nearby well-studied single dMe flare stars. The distribution
  of proper motions is consistent with the flaring stars being at the
  distance and age of the Galactic bulge. If they are single dwarfs,
  then they span a range of ≈1.0-0.25 M <SUB>⊙</SUB>. A majority of
  the flaring stars exhibit periodic photometric modulations with P &lt;
  3 days. If these are tidally locked magnetically active binary systems,
  then their fraction in the bulge is enhanced by a factor of ~20 compared
  to the local value. These stars may be useful for placing constraints
  on the angular momentum evolution of cool close binary stars. Our
  results expand the type of stars studied for flares in the optical
  band, and suggest that future sensitive optical time-domain studies
  will have to contend with a larger sample of flaring stars than the
  M dwarf flare stars usually considered.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: MOST Observations of the Flare Star AD Leo
Authors: Hunt-Walker, Nicholas M.; Hilton, Eric J.; Kowalski, Adam F.;
   Hawley, Suzanne L.; Matthews, Jaymie M.
2012PASP..124..545H    Altcode: 2012arXiv1206.5019H
  We present continuous, high-precision photometric monitoring data
  with 1 minute cadence of the dM3e flare star AD Leo with the MOST
  satellite. We observed 19 flares in 5.8 days and found a flare
  frequency distribution that is similar to previous studies. The light
  curve reveals a sinusoidal modulation with a period of days that we
  attribute to the rotation of a stellar spot rotating into and out
  of view. We see no correlation between the occurrence of flares and
  rotational phase, indicating that there may be many spots distributed
  at different longitudes or, possibly, that the modulation is caused
  by varying surface coverage of a large polar spot that is viewed
  nearly pole-on. The data show no correlation between flare energy
  and the time since the previous flare. We use these results to reject
  a simple model in which all magnetic energy is stored in one active
  region and released only during flares. <P />Based on observations
  obtained with the Apache Point Observatory 3.5 m telescope, which is
  owned and operated by the Astrophysical Research Consortium.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar Flare Observations of the EUV Continua
Authors: Milligan, Ryan O.; Chamberlin, P.; Hudson, H.; Woods, T.;
   Mathioudakis, M.; Fletcher, L.; Kowalski, A.; Keenan, F.
2012AAS...22052105M    Altcode:
  Recent solar flare simulations suggest that the energy deposited in the
  chromosphere by nonthermal electrons during a flare's impulsive phase
  is re-emitted in the form of recombination (free-bound) continua, in
  particular, the Lyman, Balmer, and Paschen continua of hydrogen, and
  the He I and He II continua (Allred et al. 2005). However, definitive
  observations of free-bound emission during solar flares have been scarce
  in recent years as many modern, space-based instruments do not have
  the required sensitivity, wavelength coverage, or duty cycle. With
  the launch of SDO, these observations are now routinely available
  thanks to the EUV Variability Experiment (EVE) instrument. Here we
  present unambiguous, spectrally and temporally resolved detections of
  enhanced free-free and free-bound continua during the first X-class
  solar flare of Solar Cycle 24. While we find that the flare energy
  in the EVE spectral range amounts to at most a few percent of the
  total flare energy, these findings highlight the capability of EVE
  in giving us the first comprehensive look at these diagnostically
  important continuum components.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Time-resolved NUV And Optical Spectra Of A Stellar Megaflare
    On YZ CMi With SALT/RSS
Authors: Brown, Benjamin; Kowalski, A. F.; Mathioudakis, M.; Hooper,
   E. J.; Hawley, S. L.; Osten, R. A.; Wisniewski, J. P.
2012AAS...22020452B    Altcode:
  The primary mode of radiative energy release in stellar flares is
  in the optical and near-ultraviolet (NUV) continuum. Active M-dwarf
  stares flare more frequently than the Sun, and their flares can be
  substantially more energetic. The dominant component in solar flare
  white light is thought to be Hydrogen recombination, whereas for stellar
  M dwarf flares, the dominant component is thought to be T 10,000 K
  blackbody emission. Recently we have obtained very high time-cadence
  spectral observations of the flaring M-dwarf YZ CMi (3200-6000A) using
  the Robert Stobie Spectrograph on the 11-meter South African Large
  Telescope (SALT/RSS), achieving 100x better temporal resolution than
  has previously been possible at the atmospheric limit. We observed
  a megaflare of over 100x flux enhancement in the NUV emission. Here
  we discuss the evolution of the stellar flare spectrum during the
  rapid impulsive phase of the flare and the implications for stellar
  flare models.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Using Kepler Data to Characterize the Flare Properties of
    GK Stars
Authors: Kowalski, Adam F.; Deitrick, Russell J.; Brown, Alex;
   Davenport, Jim R. A.; Hawley, Suzanne L.; Hilton, Eric J.; Ayres,
   Thomas R.; Berdyugina, Svetlana V.; Harper, Graham M.; Korhonen,
   Heidi; Walkowicz, Lucianne M.
2012decs.confE.120K    Altcode:
  Due to their high occurrence rate and large contrast against the
  background stellar emission, white-light flares on a handful of
  very active low-mass M stars have been the primary source for our
  understanding of optical flare emission. Kepler's high-precision, long
  baseline light curves have opened up the characterization of white-light
  emission to new domains of stars, including active G dwarfs. We present
  the properties of white-light flares on GALEX-selected solar-type stars
  from GO data in Q1-Q7. The flares are discussed in relation to intrinsic
  stellar properties, which are constrained by a vast amount of follow-up
  characterization of the sample. We compare the flare properties to
  large white-light flares observed on the Sun. These high-precision
  state-of-the-art observations will provide important constraints for
  models of internal magnetic dynamos and NLTE radiative-hydrodynamic
  simulations of energy deposition in the lower atmospheric layers.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Observations of Enhanced Extreme Ultraviolet Continua during
    an X-Class Solar Flare Using SDO/EVE
Authors: Milligan, Ryan O.; Chamberlin, Phillip C.; Hudson, Hugh S.;
   Woods, Thomas N.; Mathioudakis, Mihalis; Fletcher, Lyndsay; Kowalski,
   Adam F.; Keenan, Francis P.
2012ApJ...748L..14M    Altcode: 2012arXiv1202.1731M
  Observations of extreme ultraviolet (EUV) emission from an X-class solar
  flare that occurred on 2011 February 15 at 01:44 UT are presented,
  obtained using the EUV Variability Experiment (EVE) on board the
  Solar Dynamics Observatory. The complete EVE spectral range covers
  the free-bound continua of H I (Lyman continuum), He I, and He II,
  with recombination edges at 91.2, 50.4, and 22.8 nm, respectively. By
  fitting the wavelength ranges blueward of each recombination edge
  with an exponential function, light curves of each of the integrated
  continua were generated over the course of the flare, as was emission
  from the free-free continuum (6.5-37 nm). The He II 30.4 nm and Lyα
  121.6 nm lines, and soft X-ray (SXR; 0.1-0.8 nm) emission from GOES are
  also included for comparison. Each free-bound continuum was found to
  have a rapid rise phase at the flare onset similar to that seen in the
  25-50 keV light curves from RHESSI, suggesting that they were formed
  by recombination with free electrons in the chromosphere. However,
  the free-free emission exhibited a slower rise phase seen also in the
  SXR emission from GOES, implying a predominantly coronal origin. By
  integrating over the entire flare the total energy emitted via
  each process was determined. We find that the flare energy in the
  EVE spectral range amounts to at most a few percent of the total
  flare energy, but EVE gives us a first comprehensive look at these
  diagnostically important continuum components.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Multi-wavelength Characterization of Stellar Flares on Low-mass
    Stars Using SDSS and 2MASS Time-domain Surveys
Authors: Davenport, James R. A.; Becker, Andrew C.; Kowalski, Adam
   F.; Hawley, Suzanne L.; Schmidt, Sarah J.; Hilton, Eric J.; Sesar,
   Branimir; Cutri, Roc
2012ApJ...748...58D    Altcode: 2012arXiv1202.1902D
  We present the first rates of flares from M dwarf stars in both red
  optical and near-infrared (NIR) filters. We have studied ~50,000 M
  dwarfs from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Stripe 82 area and
  1321 M dwarfs from the Two Micron All Sky Survey (2MASS) Calibration
  Scan Point Source Working Database that overlap SDSS imaging fields. We
  assign photometric spectral types from M0 to M6 using (r - i) and (i -
  z) colors for every star in our sample. Stripe 82 stars each have 50-100
  epochs of data, while 2MASS Calibration stars have ~1900 epochs. From
  these data we estimate the observed rates and theoretical detection
  thresholds for flares in eight photometric bands as a function of
  spectral type. Optical flare rates are found to be in agreement with
  previous studies, while the frequency per hour of NIR flare detections
  is found to be more than two orders of magnitude lower. An excess
  of small-amplitude flux increases in all bands exhibits a power-law
  distribution, which we interpret as the result of flares below our
  detection thresholds. In order to investigate the recovery efficiency
  for flares in each filter, we extend a two-component flare model into
  the NIR. Quiescent M0-M6 spectral templates were used with the model
  to predict the photometric response of flares from u to K<SUB>s</SUB>
  . We determine that red optical filters are sensitive to flares with
  u-band amplitudes gsim2 mag, and NIR filters to flares with Δu gsim
  4.5 mag. Our model predicts that M0 stars have the best color contrast
  for J-band detections, but M4-M6 stars should yield the highest rate of
  NIR flares with amplitudes of ΔJ &gt;= 0.01 mag. Characterizing flare
  rates and photometric variations at longer wavelengths is important for
  predicting the signatures of M dwarf variability in next-generation
  surveys, and we discuss their impact on surveys such as the Large
  Synoptic Survey Telescope.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Multiple Continuum Components in the White-Light Flare
    of 16 January 2009 on the dM4.5e Star YZ CMi
Authors: Kowalski, A. F.; Hawley, S. L.; Holtzman, J. A.; Wisniewski,
   J. P.; Hilton, E. J.
2012SoPh..277...21K    Altcode: 2011arXiv1109.0837K
  The white light during M dwarf flares has long been known to exhibit
  the broadband shape of a T≈10 000 K blackbody, and the white
  light in solar-flares is thought to arise primarily from hydrogen
  recombination. Yet, a current lack of broad-wavelength coverage
  solar flare spectra in the optical/near-UV region prohibits a direct
  comparison of the continuum properties to determine if they are indeed
  so different. New spectroscopic observations of a secondary flare
  during the decay of a megaflare on the dM4.5e star YZ CMi have revealed
  multiple components in the white-light continuum of stellar flares,
  including both a blackbody-like spectrum and a hydrogen-recombination
  spectrum. One of the most surprising findings is that these two
  components are anti-correlated in their temporal evolution. We combine
  initial phenomenological modeling of the continuum components with
  spectra from radiative hydrodynamic models to show that continuum
  veiling causes the measured anti-correlation. This modeling allows us
  to use the components' inferred properties to predict how a similar
  spatially resolved, multiple-component, white-light continuum might
  appear using analogies to several solar-flare phenomena. We also
  compare the properties of the optical stellar flare white light to
  Ellerman bombs on the Sun.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: MMT Hectochelle Spectral Variability of Active Late-type
    Stars in the Kepler Field (2012A)
Authors: Brown, Alexander; Walkowicz, Lucianne; Hawley, Suzanne;
   Kowalski, Adam; Saar, Steven; Furesz, Gabor
2012noao.prop..332B    Altcode:
  We have on-going Kepler photometric monitoring of over 200 active
  late-type (mid-A - K) stars as part of our Cycles 1/2/3 Guest Observer
  (GO) programs with the aim of studying starspot evolution, differential
  rotation, activity cycles, and flares. We propose to use the MMT
  Hectochelle multiobject spectrograph to observe over 120 of these stars
  to determine a range of basic physical properties for the stars, such
  as radial velocity variations due to binarity, chromospheric activity
  levels from Ca II H+K and H(alpha), projected rotational velocities
  for comparison to the rotational periods measured directly by Kepler,
  age/youth as indicated by Li I, and better effective temperature and
  luminosity estimates. In addition, to provide a superior sample for
  statistical studies another ~1,000 GKM dwarf stars showing either
  starspot modulation from the Kepler Team's data or from our on-going
  deep XMM X-ray survey will be observed using the unassigned fibers in
  each field. These measurements require the 32,000 spectral resolution
  provided by Hectochelle, which is hard to obtain efficiently for
  13-15th magnitude stars any other way.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Probing the Flare Atmospheres of M Dwarfs Using Infrared
    Emission Lines
Authors: Schmidt, Sarah J.; Kowalski, Adam F.; Hawley, Suzanne L.;
   Hilton, Eric J.; Wisniewski, John P.; Tofflemire, Benjamin M.
2012ApJ...745...14S    Altcode: 2011arXiv1111.7072S
  We present the results of a campaign to monitor active M dwarfs
  using infrared spectroscopy, supplemented with optical photometry and
  spectroscopy. We detected 16 flares during nearly 50 hr of observations
  on EV Lac, AD Leo, YZ CMi, and VB 8. The three most energetic flares
  also showed infrared emission, including the first reported detections
  of Pβ, Pγ, He I λ10830, and Brγ during an M dwarf flare. The
  strongest flare (Δu = 4.02 on EV Lac) showed emission from Hγ, Hδ,
  He I λ4471, and Ca II K in the UV/blue and Pβ, Pγ, Pδ, Brγ,
  and He I λ10830 in the infrared. The weaker flares (Δu = 1.68 on
  EV Lac and ΔU = 1.38 on YZ CMi) were only observed with photometry
  and infrared spectroscopy; both showed emission from Pβ, Pγ, and
  He I λ10830. The strongest infrared emission line, Pβ, occurred in
  the active mid-M dwarfs with a duty cycle of ~3%-4%. To examine the
  most energetic flare, we used the static NLTE radiative transfer code
  RH to produce model spectra based on a suite of one-dimensional model
  atmospheres. Using a hotter chromosphere than previous one-dimensional
  atmospheric models, we obtain line ratios that match most of the
  observed emission lines. <P />Based on observations obtained with the
  Apache Point Observatory 3.5 m telescope, which is owned and operated
  by the Astrophysical Research Consortium.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Implications of M Dwarf Flares on the Detection and
    Characterization of Exoplanets at Infrared Wavelengths
Authors: Tofflemire, Benjamin M.; Wisniewski, John P.; Kowalski,
   Adam F.; Schmidt, Sarah J.; Kundurthy, Praveen; Hilton, Eric J.;
   Holtzman, Jon A.; Hawley, Suzanne L.
2012AJ....143...12T    Altcode: 2011arXiv1111.1793T
  We present the results of an observational campaign which obtained
  high-cadence, high-precision, simultaneous optical and IR photometric
  observations of three M dwarf flare stars for 47 hr. The campaign
  was designed to characterize the behavior of energetic flare events,
  which routinely occur on M dwarfs, at IR wavelengths to millimagnitude
  precision, and quantify to what extent such events might influence
  current and future efforts to detect and characterize extrasolar
  planets surrounding these stars. We detected and characterized four
  highly energetic optical flares having U-band total energies of
  ~7.8 × 10<SUP>30</SUP> to ~1.3 × 10<SUP>32</SUP> erg, and found no
  corresponding response in the J, H, or Ks bandpasses at the precision of
  our data. For active dM3e stars, we find that a ~1.3 × 10<SUP>32</SUP>
  erg U-band flare (ΔU <SUB>max</SUB> ~ 1.5 mag) will induce &lt;8.3
  (J), &lt;8.5 (H), and &lt;11.7 (Ks) mmag of a response. A flare of
  this energy or greater should occur less than once per 18 hr. For
  active dM4.5e stars, we find that a ~5.1 × 10<SUP>31</SUP> erg
  U-band flare (ΔU <SUB>max</SUB> ~ 1.6 mag) will induce &lt;7.8 (J),
  &lt;8.8 (H), and &lt;5.1 (Ks) mmag of a response. A flare of this
  energy or greater should occur less than once per 10 hr. No evidence
  of stellar variability not associated with discrete flare events was
  observed at the level of ~3.9 mmag over 1 hr timescales and at the
  level of ~5.6 mmag over 7.5 hr timescales. We therefore demonstrate
  that most M dwarf stellar activity and flares will not influence IR
  detection and characterization studies of M dwarf exoplanets above
  the level of ~5-11 mmag, depending on the filter and spectral type. We
  speculate that the most energetic megaflares on M dwarfs, which occur
  at rates of once per month, are likely to be easily detected in IR
  observations with sensitivity of tens of millimagnitudes. We also
  discuss how recent detections of line flux enhancements during M dwarf
  flares could influence IR transmission spectroscopic observations of
  M dwarf exoplanets.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: White-Light Continuum Emission in M Dwarf Flares
Authors: Kowalski, Adam; Hawley, S. L.
2012AAS...21910403K    Altcode:
  A primary mode of radiative energy release in stellar flares
  is the optical and near-ultraviolet (NUV) continuum. However,
  radiative-hydrodynamic models of stellar flares using a solar flare
  paradigm and the sparse observations of solar and stellar flare continua
  are all seemingly in disagreement over the type(s) of emission that
  contribute to the optical/NUV continuum during flares. We have completed
  a long-term flare monitoring campaign using simultaneous low-resolution
  (3400-9200A) spectroscopic and broadband photometric observations to
  fully characterize the optical/NUV white light continuum emission on
  short timescales. To date, our most significant results come from
  observations during the decay phase of a megaflare on the dM4.5e
  star YZ CMi, where we have detected multiple continuum components
  that contribute to the white light near the Balmer jump (3646A). We
  present a time-resolved spectral analysis of the continuum components
  and emission lines for this flare and for several other large and small
  flares obtained during our spectroscopic monitoring campaign. We compare
  these data to phenomenological flare models with the RH code and to
  preliminary results from the next-generation of radiative-hydrodynamic
  1D flare models with the RADYN code. <P />Funding for this project
  has been provided by NSF AST 0807205. Observations were obtained
  with the ARC 3.5m, the NMSU 1m, and the ARCSAT 0.5m at the Apache
  Point Observatory.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Time-Resolved Properties and Global Trends in dMe Flares from
    Simultaneous Photometry and Spectra
Authors: Kowalski, Adam F.
2012PhDT.......179K    Altcode:
  We present a homogeneous survey of near-ultraviolet (NUV) /optical line
  and continuum emission during twenty M dwarf flares with simultaneous,
  high cadence photometry and spectra. These data were obtained to
  study the white-light continuum components to the blue and red of the
  Balmer jump to break the degeneracy with fitting emission mechanisms to
  broadband colors and to provide constraints for radiative-hydrodynamic
  flare models that seek to reproduce the white-light flare emission. The
  main results from the continuum analysis are the following: 1)
  the detection of Balmer continuum (in emission) that is present
  during all flares, with a wide range of relative contribution to the
  continuum flux in the NUV; 2) a blue continuum at the peak of the
  photometry that is linear with wavelength from λ = 4000 - 4800Å,
  matched by the spectral shape of hot, blackbody emission with typical
  temperatures of 10 000 - 12 000 K; 3) a redder continuum apparent at
  wavelengths longer than Hβ; this continuum becomes relatively more
  important to the energy budget during the late gradual phase. The hot
  blackbody component and redder continuum component (which we call "the
  conundruum") have been detected in previous UBVR colorimetry studies
  of flares. With spectra, one can compare the properties and detailed
  timings of all three components. Using time-resolved spectra during
  the rise phase of three flares, we calculate the speed of an expanding
  flare region assuming a simple geometry; the speeds are found to be ~5-
  10 km s-1 and 50 - 120 km s -1, which are strikingly consistent with
  the speeds at which two-ribbon flares develop on the Sun. The main
  results from the emission line analysis are 1) the presentation of
  the "time-decrement", a relation between the timescales of the Balmer
  series; 2) a Neupert-like relation between Ca \pcy K and the blackbody
  continuum, and 3) the detection of absorption wings in the Hydrogen
  Balmer lines during times of peak continuum emission, indicative of
  hot-star spectra forming during the flare. A byproduct of this study
  is a new method for deriving absolute fluxes during M dwarf flare
  observations obtained from narrow-slit spectra or during variable
  weather conditions. This technique allows us to analyze the spectra
  and photometry independently of one another, in order to connect the
  spectral properties to the rise, peak, and decay phases of broadband
  light curve morphology. We classify the light curve morphology according
  to an "impulsiveness index" and find that the fast (impulsive) flares
  have less Balmer continuum at peak emission than the slow (gradual)
  flares. In the gradual phase, the energy budget of the flare spectrum
  during almost all flares has a larger contribution from the Hydrogen
  Balmer component than in the impulsive phase, suggesting that the
  heating and cooling processes evolve over the course of a flare. We
  find that, in general, the evolution of the hot blackbody is rapid,
  and that the blackbody temperature decreases to ~8000 K in the gradual
  phase. The Balmer continuum evolves more slowly than the blackbody ¨C
  similar to the higher order Balmer lines but faster than the lower
  order Balmer lines. The height of the Balmer jump increases during
  the gradual decay phase. We model the Balmer continuum emission using
  the RHD F11 model spectrum from Allred et al. (2006), but we discuss
  several important systematic uncertainties in relating the apparent
  amount of Balmer continuum to a given RHD beam model. Good fits to the
  shape of the RHD F11 model spectrum are not obtained at peak times,
  in contrast to the gradual phase. We model the blackbody component
  using model hot star atmospheres from Castelli &amp; Kurucz (2004)
  in order to account for the effects of flux redistribution in the
  flare atmosphere. This modeling is motivated by observations during
  a secondary flare in the decay phase of a megaflare, when the newly
  formed flare spectrum resembled that of Vega with the Balmer continuum
  and lines in absorption. We model this continuum phenomenologically
  with the RH code using hot spots placed at high column mass in the
  M dwarf quiescent atmosphere; a superposition of hot spot models and
  the RHD model are used to explain the anti-correlation in the apparent
  amount of Balmer continuum in emission and the U-band light curve. We
  attempt to reproduce the blackbody component in self-consistent 1D
  radiative hydrodynamic flare models using the RADYN code. We simulate
  the flare using a solar-type nonthermal electron beam heating function
  with a total energy flux of 1012 ergs cm-2 s-1 (F12) for a duration of
  5 seconds and a subsequent gradual phase. Although there is a larger
  amount of NUV backwarming at log mc/(1g cm-2)~0 than in the F11 model,
  the resulting flare continuum shape is similar to the F11 model spectrum
  with a larger Balmer jump and a much redder spectral shape than is seen
  in the observations. We do not find evidence of white-light emitting
  chromospheric condensations, in contrast to the previous F12 model of
  Livshits et al. (1981). We discuss future avenues for RHD modeling in
  order to produce a hot blackbody component, including the treatment
  of nonthermal protons in M dwarf flares.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 7 M Dwarf
    Spectroscopic Catalog
Authors: West, A. A.; Morgan, D. P.; Bochanski, J. J.; Andersen,
   J. M.; Bell, K. J.; Kowalski, A. F.; Davenport, J. R. A.; Hawley,
   S. L.; Schmidt, S. J.; Bernat, D.; Hilton, E. J.; Muirhead, P.;
   Covey, K. R.; Rojas-Ayala, B.; Schlawin, E.; Gooding, M.; Schluns,
   K.; Dhital, S.; Pineda, J. S.; Jones, D. O.
2011ASPC..448.1407W    Altcode: 2010arXiv1012.3766W; 2011csss...16.1407W
  We present a spectroscopic catalog of 70,841 visually inspected M
  dwarfs from the seventh data release (DR7) of the Sloan Digital Sky
  Survey (SDSS). For each spectrum, we provide measurements of the
  spectral type, a number of molecular bandheads, and the Hα, Hβ,
  Hγ, Hδ and Ca II K emission lines. In addition, we calculate the
  metallicity-sensitive parameter ζ and 3D space motions for most of the
  stars in the sample. Our catalog is cross-matched to Two Micron All Sky
  Survey (2MASS) infrared data, and contains photometric distances for
  each star. Future studies will use these data to thoroughly examine
  magnetic activity and kinematics in late-type M dwarfs and examine
  the chemical and dynamical history of the local Milky Way.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Mining Databases for M Dwarf Variability
Authors: Davenport, J. R. A.; Becker, A. C.; Hawley, S. L.; Kowalski,
   A. F.; Sesar, B.; Cutri, R. M.
2011ASPC..448..983D    Altcode: 2011csss...16..983D; 2011arXiv1101.1363D
  Time-resolved databases with large spatial coverage are quickly
  becoming a standard tool for all types of astronomical studies. We
  report preliminary results from our search for stellar flares in the
  2MASS calibration fields. A sample of 4343 M dwarfs, spatially matched
  between the SDSS and the 2MASS calibration fields, each with hundreds
  to thousands of epochs in near infrared bandpasses, is analyzed using
  a modified Welch-Stetson index to characterize the variability. A
  Monte Carlo model was used to assess the noise of the variability
  index. We find significnat residuals above the noise with power-law
  slopes of -3.37 and -4.05 for our JH and HK<SUB>s</SUB> distributions
  respectively. This is evidence for flares being observed from M dwarfs
  in infrared photometry.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: M Dwarf Flares: Exoplanet Detection Implications
Authors: Tofflemire, B. M.; Wisniewski, J. P.; Hilton, E. J.; Kowalski,
   A. F.; Kundurthy, P.; Schmidt, S. J.; Hawley, S. L.; Holtzman, J. A.
2011ASPC..448.1287T    Altcode: 2011csss...16.1287T
  Low mass stars such as M dwarfs have become prime targets for exoplanet
  transit searches as their low luminosities and small stellar radii
  could enable the detection of super-Earths residing in their habitable
  zones. While promising transit targets, M dwarfs are also inherently
  variable and can exhibit up to ∼6 magnitude flux enhancements in
  the optical U-band. This is significantly higher than the predicted
  transit depths of habitable zone super-Earths (0.005 magnitude
  flux decrease). The behavior of flares at infrared (IR) wavelengths,
  particularly those likely to be used to study and characterize M dwarf
  exoplanets using facilities such as the James Web Space Telescope
  (JWST), remains largely unknown. To address these uncertainties, we
  are executing a coordinated, contemporaneous monitoring program of
  the optical and IR flux of M dwarfs known to regularly flare. A suite
  of telescopes located at the Kitt Peak National Observatory and the
  Apache Point Observatory are used for the observations. We present
  the initial results of this program.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: White Light Flare Continuum Observations with ULTRACAM
Authors: Kowalski, A. F.; Mathioudakis, M.; Hawley, S. L.; Hilton,
   E. J.; Dhillon, V. S.; Marsh, T. R.; Copperwheat, C. M.
2011ASPC..448.1157K    Altcode: 2011arXiv1103.0822K; 2011csss...16.1157K
  We present sub-second, continuous-coverage photometry of three flares
  on the dM3.5e star, EQ Peg A, using custom continuum filters with
  WHT/ULTRACAM. These data provide a new view of flare continuum emission,
  with each flare exhibiting a very distinct light curve morphology. The
  spectral shape of flare emission for the two large-amplitude flares
  is compared with synthetic ULTRACAM measurements taken from the
  spectra during the large 'megaflare' event on a similar type flare
  star. The white light shape during the impulsive phase of the EQ
  Peg flares is consistent with the range of colors derived from the
  megaflare continuum, which is known to contain a Hydrogen recombination
  component and compact, blackbody-like components. Tentative evidence
  in the ULTRACAM photometry is found for an anti-correlation between
  the emission of these components.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Galactic M Dwarf Flare Rate
Authors: Hilton, E. J.; Hawley, S. L.; Kowalski, A. F.; Holtzman, J.
2011ASPC..448..197H    Altcode: 2011csss...16..197H
  M dwarfs are known to flare on timescales from minutes to hours,
  with flux increases of several magnitudes in the blue/near-UV. These
  frequent, powerful events, which are caused by magnetic reconnection,
  will have a strong observational signature in large, time-domain
  surveys. The radiation and particle fluxes from flares may also exert
  a significant influence on the atmospheres of orbiting planets, and
  affect their habitability. We present a statistical model of flaring
  M dwarfs in the Galaxy that allows us to predict the observed flare
  rate along a given line of sight for a particular survey depth and
  cadence. The parameters that enter the model are the Galactic structure,
  the distribution of magnetically active and inactive M dwarfs, and
  the flare frequency distribution (FFD) of both populations. The FFD is
  a function of spectral type, activity, and Galactic height. Although
  inactive M dwarfs make up the majority of stars in a magnitude-limited
  survey, the FFD of inactive stars is very poorly constrained. We
  have organized a flare monitoring campaign comprising hundreds of
  hours of new observations from both the ground and space to better
  constrain flare rates. Incorporating the new observations into our
  model provides more accurate predictions of stellar variability caused
  by flares on M dwarfs. We pay particular attention to the likelihood
  of flares appearing as optical transients (i.e., host star not seen
  in quiescent data).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Splinter Session "Solar and Stellar Flares"
Authors: Fletcher, L.; Hudson, H.; Cauzzi, G.; Getman, K. V.; Giampapa,
   M.; Hawley, S. L.; Heinzel, P.; Johnstone, C.; Kowalski, A. F.; Osten,
   R. A.; Pye, J.
2011ASPC..448..441F    Altcode: 2011csss...16..441F; 2012arXiv1206.3997F
  This summary reports on papers presented at the Cool Stars-16 meeting in
  the splinter session "Solar and Stellar flares." Although many topics
  were discussed, the main themes were the commonality of interests,
  and of physics, between the solar and stellar flare communities,
  and the opportunities for important new observations in the near future.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: An “A star” on an M star during a flare within a flare
Authors: Kowalski, Adam F.; Hawley, Suzanne L.; Holtzman, Jon A.;
   Wisniewski, John P.; Hilton, Eric J.
2011IAUS..273..261K    Altcode: 2010arXiv1010.0452K
  M dwarfs produce explosive flare emission in the near-UV and optical
  continuum, and the mechanism responsible for this phenomenon is not
  well-understood. We present a near-UV/optical flare spectrum from the
  rise phase of a secondary flare, which occurred during the decay of
  a much larger flare. The newly formed flare emission resembles the
  spectrum of an early-type star, with the Balmer lines and continuum
  in absorption. We model this observation phenomenologically as a
  temperature bump (hot spot) near the photosphere of the M dwarf. The
  amount of heating implied by our model (ΔT<SUB>phot</SUB> ~ 16,000 K)
  is far more than predicted by chromospheric backwarming in current 1D
  RHD flare models (ΔT<SUB>phot</SUB> ~ 1200 K).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Starspot variability and evolution from modeling Kepler
    photometry of active late-type stars
Authors: Brown, Alexander; Korhonen, Heidi; Berdyugina, Svetlana;
   Tofany, Barton; Ayres, Thomas R.; Kowalski, Adam; Hawley, Suzanne;
   Harper, Graham; Piskunov, Nikolai
2011IAUS..273...78B    Altcode:
  The Kepler satellite provides a unique opportunity to study the detailed
  optical photometric variability of late-type stars with unprecedentedly
  long (several year) continuous monitoring and sensitivity to very
  small-scale variations. We are studying a sample of over two hundred
  cool (mid-A - late-K spectral type) stars using Kepler long-cadence
  (30 minute sampling) observations. These stars show a remarkable
  range of photometric variability, but in this paper we concentrate on
  rotational modulation due to starspots and flaring. Modulation at the
  0.1% level is readily discernable. We highlight the rapid timescales
  of starspot evolution seen on solar-like stars with rotational periods
  between 2 and 7 days.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The First Detection of Time-Variable Infrared Line Emission
    During M Dwarf Flares
Authors: Schmidt, Sarah J.; Hilton, E. J.; Tofflemire, B.; Wisniewski,
   J. P.; Kowalski, A. F.; Holtzman, J.; Hawley, S. L.
2011AAS...21832604S    Altcode: 2011BAAS..43G32604S
  M dwarfs are notorious for their active chromospheres, characterized by
  quiescent line emission at optical wavelengths in addition to dramatic
  flare events. These flares have been well-studied at X-ray, radio,
  UV, and optical wavelengths, but so far there is only one single-epoch
  detection of high-order Paschen emission lines in a red optical spectrum
  (Schmidt et al. 2007). In order to investigate infrared line emission
  during flares, we have conducted a monitoring campaign totaling
  about 60 hours on 5 active M dwarfs. We have obtained infrared (0.9
  to 2.4 micron) spectroscopy using the TripleSpec instrument on the
  Apache Point Observatory 3.5-m, simultaneous optical/UV photometry
  on the NMSU 1-m and ARC 0.8-m, and optical spectroscopy on the DAO
  1.8-m for one run. During the three brightest flares observed on EV
  Lac and YZ CMi (&gt; 2 magnitudes in U), we observed emission from
  Hydrogen Paschen beta, gamma, and delta; Brackett gamma, and Helium
  10830A. We characterize the strength and time variation of these
  lines and investigate the heating needed to produce infrared emission
  during flares.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Light Curves, Energetics and Rates of M Dwarf Flares
Authors: Hilton, Eric J.; Hawley, S. L.; Kowalski, A. F.; Schmidt,
   S. J.; Davenport, J. R. A.; Wisniewski, J. P.; Bell, K. J.; Tofflemire,
   B.; Holtzman, J.
2011AAS...21832502H    Altcode: 2011BAAS..43G32502H
  The magnetic reconnection events that power stellar flares lead to a
  wide variety of light curve shapes, hinting at the complex underlying
  magnetic field topologies. Using our quantitative definition of a flare
  event, we find more than 100 flares during 600 hours of photometric
  monitoring of two dozen stars. The sample includes both active and
  inactive M dwarfs with a range of spectral type. We fit models for the
  light curve evolution to our photometric flare catalogue and present
  an analysis of the rise and decay times as well as flare colors. We
  additionally present the distribution of flare rates as a function of
  energy and equivalent duration. The flare frequency distribution is
  used to characterize the impact of M dwarf flares seen in time domain
  surveys, and is also necessary to model the effect of flares on the
  atmospheres of exoplanets orbiting an M dwarf host.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High Cadence Kepler Observations of Flare Stars
Authors: Hawley, Suzanne L.; Kowalski, A. F.; Wisniewski, J. P.;
   Hilton, E. J.; Walkowicz, L. M.; Brown, A.
2011AAS...21822705H    Altcode: 2011BAAS..43G22705H
  We report on preliminary results from our Kepler Cycle 2 GO program to
  observe low mass stars at high cadence (one observation per minute). The
  outstanding fidelity of the Kepler light curves reveals both starspot
  modulation and a large number of stellar flares. We investigate the
  flare amplitude, frequency and energy distributions and relate these
  to the better-known nearby flare stars in the solar neighborhood.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: UV Diagnostics of Stellar and Solar Flares
Authors: Kowalski, Adam; Hawley, S. L.; Hudson, H. S.
2011AAS...21821303K    Altcode: 2011BAAS..43G21303K
  The UV spectral regime provides a comprehensive view of the plasma
  dynamics and atmospheric temperature structure during stellar flares. We
  review the major developments in UV spectroscopy of flares on low mass
  stars that shape our understanding of the flare process and challenge
  the predictions of current radiative hydrodynamic models. We put the
  ultraviolet properties in context with the radiation in the neighboring
  X-ray and visible wavelength regimes. We also show how SDO/EVE data
  of several Cycle 24 solar flares allow for new comparisons to be made
  between solar and stellar flares.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: M Dwarf Photometric Variability In The Optical And NIR
Authors: Davenport, James R. A.; Becker, A. C.; Kowalski, A. F.;
   Hawley, S. L.; Hilton, E. J.
2011AAS...21832603D    Altcode: 2011BAAS..43G32603D
  We present limits on the observability of stochastic flare events from
  M dwarfs in SDSS and 2MASS filters. We have studied 30,000 M dwarfs
  from the SDSS Stripe 82 time-domain catalog, and 4300 M dwarfs from the
  2MASS Calibration Scan Point Source Working Database which overlap the
  SDSS DR7 single-epoch data. M dwarfs are chosen based on their SDSS
  r,i,z colors. Stripe 82 stars each have 50-100 epochs of data, while
  2MASS Calibration stars have 2000-3000. An M dwarf continuum spectral
  model is used to predict observed flare signatures in each band. From
  these data we estimate the observed rates and theoretical detection
  thresholds for flares in eight photometric bands as a function of
  spectral type. The structure function of the variability for each
  spectral type bin is also calculated for all eight bands. These
  rates of flares and photometric variations at longer wavelengths
  will be important for predicting the impact of M dwarf variability in
  next-generation instruments such as JWST.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Kepler Observations of Starspot Evolution, Differential
    Rotation, and Flares on Late-Type Stars
Authors: Brown, Alexander; Korhonen, H.; Berdyugina, S.; Walkowicz,
   L.; Kowalski, A.; Hawley, S.; Neff, J.; Ramsey, L.; Redman, S.; Saar,
   S.; Furesz, G.; Piskunov, N.; Harper, G.; Ayres, T.; Tofany, B.
2011AAS...21820502B    Altcode: 2011BAAS..43G20502B
  The Kepler satellite is providing spectacular optical photometric
  light-curves of unprecedented precision and duration that
  routinely allow detailed studies of stellar magnetic activity on
  late-type stars that were difficult, if not impossible, to attempt
  previously. Rotational modulation due to starspots is commonly seen
  in the Kepler light-curves of late-type stars, allowing detailed
  study of the surface distribution of their photospheric magnetic
  activity. Kepler is providing multi-year duration light-curves that
  allow us to investigate how activity phenomena -- such as the growth,
  migration, and decay of starspots, differential rotation, activity
  cycles, and flaring -- operate on single and binary stars with a
  wide range of mass and convection zone depth. <P />We present the
  first results from detailed starspot modeling using newly-developed
  light-curve inversion codes for a range of GALEX-selected stars with
  typical rotation periods of a few days, that we have observed as part of
  our 200 target Kepler Cycle 1/2 Guest Observer programs. The physical
  properties of the stars have been measured using high resolution
  optical spectroscopy, which allows the Kepler results to be placed
  within the existing framework of knowledge regarding stellar magnetic
  activity. These results demonstrate the powerful diagnostic capability
  provided by tracking starspot evolution essentially continuously for
  more than 16 months. The starspots are clearly sampling the stellar
  rotation rate at different latitudes, enabling us to measure the
  differential rotation and starspot lifetimes. As would be expected,
  stars with few day rotation show frequent flaring that is easily seen
  as "white-light" flares in Kepler light-curves. We compare the observed
  flare rates and occurrence with the starspot properties. <P />This work
  contains results obtained using the NASA Kepler satellite and from the
  Apache Point Observatory, the MMT (using NOAO community access time),
  and the Hobby-Eberly Telescope. Funding is provided by NASA Kepler
  grants NNX10AC51G and NNX11AC79G.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Kepler Observations of Pulsations In A Sample of
    Magnetically-Active Stars
Authors: Neff, James E.; Brown, A.; Hawley, S.; Kowalski, A.;
   Walkowicz, L.; Saar, S.
2011AAS...21822704N    Altcode: 2011BAAS..43G22704N
  We have observed about 200 targets in Kepler Cycle 1/2 Guest Observer
  programs. The sample of active star candidates was selected primarily
  using GALEX colors, and the Kepler light curves have revealed a rich
  variety of variability. Rotational modulation (typical periods a few
  days) due to starspots over the multi-year timeline of the Kepler
  observations will permit us to measure surface differential rotation
  and stellar magnetic cycles. On shorter timescales, the Kepler data
  show dramatic evidence of stellar pulsations across much of the HR
  diagram. Our selection criteria yielded a sample of magnetically active
  G and K dwarfs, which might show solar-like pulsations. It also yielded
  subsamples of several well-known pulsators (e.g., Delta Scuti stars)
  as well as pulsators that currently defy easy classification. We are
  systematically classifying and analyzing the pulsating stars in the our
  Kepler GO program. We are particularly interested in using pulsations
  to probe the interior properties of active G and K dwarfs, while the
  starspots serve as a probe of the convection zone and surface layers. We
  will present summary results for several different types of pulsation,
  and we will provide a detailed asteroseismic analysis of those stars
  in our sample that were observed to have both pulsations and magnetic
  activity. <P />This work contains results obtained using the NASA
  Kepler satellite and from the Apache Point Observatory, the MMT (using
  NOAO community access time), and the Hobby-Eberly Telescope. Funding
  is provided by NASA Kepler grants NNX10AC51G and NNX11AC79G.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Subterranean CO<SUB>2</SUB> ventilation and its role in the
    net ecosystem carbon balance of a karstic shrubland
Authors: Sanchez-Cañete, E. P.; Serrano-Ortiz, P.; Kowalski, A. S.;
   Oyonarte, C.; Domingo, F.
2011GeoRL..38.9802S    Altcode: 2011GeoRL..3809802S
  Recent studies of carbonate ecosystems suggest a possible
  contribution of subterranean ventilation to the net ecosystem carbon
  balance. However, both the overall importance of such CO<SUB>2</SUB>
  exchange processes and their drivers remain unknown. Here we
  analyze several dry-season episodes of net CO<SUB>2</SUB> emissions
  to the atmosphere, along with soil and borehole CO<SUB>2</SUB>
  measurements. Results highlight important events where rapid decreases
  of underground CO<SUB>2</SUB> molar fractions correlate well with
  sizeable CO<SUB>2</SUB> release to the atmosphere. Such events, with
  high friction velocities, are attributed to ventilation processes, and
  should be accounted for by predictive models of surface CO<SUB>2</SUB>
  exchange.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Periodic Variability of Low-mass Stars in Sloan Digital Sky
    Survey Stripe 82
Authors: Becker, A. C.; Bochanski, J. J.; Hawley, S. L.; Ivezić,
   Ž.; Kowalski, A. F.; Sesar, B.; West, A. A.
2011ApJ...731...17B    Altcode: 2011arXiv1102.1387B
  We present a catalog of periodic stellar variability in the "Stripe
  82" region of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. After aggregating
  and re-calibrating catalog-level data from the survey, we ran a
  period-finding algorithm (Supersmoother) on all point-source light
  curves. We used color selection to identify systems that are likely to
  contain low-mass stars, in particular M dwarfs and white dwarfs. In
  total, we found 207 candidates, the vast majority of which appear to
  be in eclipsing binary systems. The catalog described in this paper
  includes 42 candidate M dwarf/white dwarf pairs, four white dwarf
  pairs, 59 systems whose colors indicate they are composed of two
  M dwarfs and whose light-curve shapes suggest they are in detached
  eclipsing binaries, and 28 M dwarf systems whose light-curve shapes
  suggest they are in contact binaries. We find no detached systems
  with periods longer than 3 days, thus the majority of our sources
  are likely to have experienced orbital spin-up and enhanced magnetic
  activity. Indeed, 26 of 27 M dwarf systems that we have spectra for
  show signs of chromospheric magnetic activity, far higher than the 24%
  seen in field stars of the same spectral type. We also find binaries
  composed of stars that bracket the expected boundary between partially
  and fully convective interiors, which will allow the measurement of the
  stellar mass-radius relationship across this transition. The majority
  of our contact systems have short orbital periods, with small variance
  (0.02 days) in the sample near the observed cutoff of 0.22 days. The
  accumulation of these stars at short orbital period suggests that the
  process of angular momentum loss, leading to period evolution, becomes
  less efficient at short periods. These short-period systems are in a
  novel regime for studying the effects of orbital spin-up and enhanced
  magnetic activity, which are thought to be the source of discrepancies
  between mass-radius predictions and measurements of these properties
  in eclipsing binaries.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 7 Spectroscopic M
    Dwarf Catalog. I. Data
Authors: West, Andrew A.; Morgan, Dylan P.; Bochanski, John J.;
   Andersen, Jan Marie; Bell, Keaton J.; Kowalski, Adam F.; Davenport,
   James R. A.; Hawley, Suzanne L.; Schmidt, Sarah J.; Bernat, David;
   Hilton, Eric J.; Muirhead, Philip; Covey, Kevin R.; Rojas-Ayala,
   Bárbara; Schlawin, Everett; Gooding, Mary; Schluns, Kyle; Dhital,
   Saurav; Pineda, J. Sebastian; Jones, David O.
2011AJ....141...97W    Altcode: 2011arXiv1101.1082W
  We present a spectroscopic catalog of 70,841 visually inspected M dwarfs
  from the seventh data release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. For each
  spectrum, we provide measurements of the spectral type, a number of
  molecular band heads, and the Hα, Hβ, Hγ, Hδ, and Ca II K emission
  lines. In addition, we calculate the metallicity-sensitive parameter ζ
  and identify a relationship between ζ and the g - r and r - z colors
  of M dwarfs. We assess the precision of our spectral types (which were
  assigned by individual examination), review the bulk attributes of
  the sample, and examine the magnetic activity properties of M dwarfs,
  in particular those traced by the higher order Balmer transitions. Our
  catalog is cross-matched to Two Micron All Sky Survey infrared data,
  and contains photometric distances for each star. Finally, we identify
  eight new late-type M dwarfs that are possibly within 25 pc of the
  Sun. Future studies will use these data to thoroughly examine magnetic
  activity and kinematics in late-type M dwarfs and examine the chemical
  and dynamical history of the local Milky Way.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: M Dwarf Flares: Exoplanet Implications
Authors: Wisniewski, John; Kowalski, Adam; Schmidt, Sarah; Kundurthy,
   Praveen; Hawley, Suzanne; Tofflemire, Ben; Holtzman, Jon
2011noao.prop..106W    Altcode:
  M dwarfs are attractive stars for exoplanet transit research as their
  low luminosities and small stellar radii could enable detection of
  super-Earths residing in their habitable zones. M dwarf flare events
  can cause &lt;0.1 to 6.0 magnitude flux enhancements in the optical U-
  band, which is significantly higher than the predicted transit depths
  of super-Earths (~0.005 magnitude flux decrease). While Solar flares
  have been observed to cause infrared continuum enhancements (Xu et al
  2006); surprisingly, it is not known whether energetic flares associated
  with M dwarfs can induce IR variability in filters relevant to future
  transiting exoplanet characterization studies (e.g. using JWST). We
  propose to monitor the optical &amp; IR flux of a M dwarf known to
  regularly flare, to determine what effect flares could have on future IR
  characterization studies of M dwarf exoplanets. This proposal represents
  a resubmission of our approved 2009B program, which lost &gt;80% of
  its on-sky time due to Tropical Storm Olaf (but did demonstrate the
  ability to achieve 5 milli-mag IR photometry with the KPNO 2.1m). We
  request 5 nights in 2011A to complete our science goals.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Extending M Dwarf Variability Studies to Longer Wavelengths
Authors: Davenport, James R. A.; Becker, A.; Kowalski, A. F.; Hilton,
   E. J.; Hawley, S. L.
2011AAS...21724213D    Altcode: 2011BAAS...4324213D
  Flares on M dwarfs occur stochastically, and the statistical frequency
  of such events is well characterized in the optical. Flares and stellar
  variability are a source of confusion for large time-domain surveys,
  and a unified physical model of these magnetically driven events across
  all spectral types still awaits discovery. To correctly predict the
  occurrence rate of M dwarf variability in future astronomical surveys,
  we must understand the full SED of these events as completely as
  possible. We have constructed a sample of 4000 M dwarfs with a broad
  range of properties, each with thousands of epochs of observation. This
  matched data set comes from the SDSS Stripe 82 and LINEAR databases
  in the optical, and 2MASS Calibration Scan database in the NIR. We
  present preliminary results that extend the flaring rate and variability
  signature to longer wavelengths, where many future scientific missions
  such as LSST, JWST, and others will operate.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Revealing Stellar Magnetic Fields Through M Dwarf Flares
Authors: Hilton, Eric J.; Hawley, S. L.; Kowalski, A. F.
2011AAS...21730702H    Altcode: 2011BAAS...4330702H
  Magnetic reconnection on M dwarfs powers explosive flares with flux
  increases of several magnitudes in the blue/near-UV on timescales
  of minutes to hours. We obtained over 500 hours of flare monitoring
  observations at the Apache Point Observatory to make the first
  measurements of the flare frequency distribution of inactive early
  and mid M dwarfs and active late M dwarfs. These new measurements
  combined with our studies of flare rates from both SDSS photometry and
  spectroscopy have allowed us to construct a model of M dwarf flaring in
  the Galaxy that predicts the number and magnitude of flares expected
  in a given survey. In addition to the implications for time-domain
  surveys such as LSST, Pan-STARRS, and PTF, and for planet-habitability,
  the rate of flaring on stars of different mass and age informs our
  knowledge of the formation and evolution of stellar magnetic fields. We
  find that the flare star distribution is more concentrated toward the
  Galactic mid-plane than the active star population, implying that they
  are younger. Active stars flare more frequently and with more energy
  than inactive stars. Flares on late-type active M dwarfs are less
  energetic than those on earlier types. <P />We acknowledge support
  from NSF grant AST <P />08-07205.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: An Optical Flare Rate Census of Galactic Bulge Dwarf Stars
Authors: Kowalski, Adam; Osten, R. A.; Sahu, K. C.; Hawley, S. L.
2011AAS...21734207K    Altcode: 2011BAAS...4334207K
  Flare emission is thought to be the observational consequence of
  transiently heated plasma by the dynamic interaction of magnetic fields
  throughout the stellar atmosphere. Other magnetic activity measures
  indicate that age may be a fundamental parameter for the generation and
  presence of surface magnetic fields. However, flares have been observed
  on both old and young stars, and the importance of age on the flare
  rate of a stellar population is not well known, as previous flare rate
  studies have been limited to the surrounding solar neighborhood and
  young disk population. The SWEEPS project monitored a 202x202 arcsec
  dense stellar field in the Sagittarius window of the Galactic bulge for
  a continuous seven-day period using the HST/ACS F606W (V) and F814W (I)
  filters. These data were aimed at a search for transiting exoplanets,
  but the high-cadence light curves, consisting of 260 epochs in each
  filter, provide a unique repository to mine for flare incidence in an
  evolved stellar population of dwarfs. We employ a customized algorithm
  to search for flares on 200,000 cool dwarfs of intermediate-old age,
  and we study the stellar flare rate and flare properties as a function
  of mass, V - I color, and the degree of underlying variability. These
  rates allow us to compare to the flare rates of younger stars and to
  extend the investigation of the evolution of magnetic activity to an
  older stellar population.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Making The Most Of Flaring M Dwarfs
Authors: Hunt-Walker, Nicholas; Hilton, E.; Kowalski, A.; Hawley,
   S.; Matthews, J.; Holtzman, J.
2011AAS...21724224H    Altcode: 2011BAAS...4324224H
  We present observations of flare activity using the Microvariability
  and Oscillations of Stars (MOST) satellite in conjunction with
  simultaneous spectroscopic and photometric observations from the ARC
  3.5-meter, NMSU 1.0-meter, and ARCSAT 0.5-meter telescopes at the
  Apache Point Observatory. The MOST observations enable unprecedented
  completeness with regard to observing frequent, low-energy flares on
  the well-known dMe flare star AD Leo with broadband photometry. The
  observations span approximately one week with a 60-second cadence and
  are sensitive to flares as small as 0.01-magnitudes. The time-resolved,
  ground-based spectroscopy gives measurements of Hα and other important
  chromospheric emission lines, whereas the Johnson U-, SDSS u-, and SDSS
  g-band photometry provide color information during the flare events
  and allow us to relate the MOST observations to decades of previous
  broadband observations. Understanding the rates and energetics of flare
  events on M dwarfs will help characterize this source of variability in
  large time-domain surveys such as LSST and Pan-STARRS. Flare rates are
  also of interest to astrobiology, since flares affect the habitability
  of exoplanets orbiting M dwarfs.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: M Dwarf Flares from Time-resolved Sloan Digital Sky Survey
    Spectra
Authors: Hilton, Eric J.; West, Andrew A.; Hawley, Suzanne L.;
   Kowalski, Adam F.
2010AJ....140.1402H    Altcode: 2010arXiv1009.1158H
  We have identified 63 flares on M dwarfs from the individual component
  spectra in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) using a novel measurement
  of emission-line strength called the Flare Line Index. Each of the
  ~38,000 M dwarfs in the SDSS low-mass star spectroscopic sample of West
  et al. was observed several times (usually 3-5) in exposures that were
  typically 9-25 minutes in duration. Our criteria allowed us to identify
  flares that exhibit very strong Hα and Hβ emission-line strength
  and/or significant variability in those lines throughout the course of
  the exposures. The flares we identified have characteristics consistent
  with flares observed by classical spectroscopic monitoring. The flare
  duty cycle for the objects in our sample is found to increase from 0.02%
  for early M dwarfs to 3% for late M dwarfs. We find that the flare duty
  cycle is larger in the population near the Galactic plane and that
  the flare stars are more spatially restricted than the magnetically
  active but non-flaring stars. This suggests that flare frequency may
  be related to stellar age (younger stars are more likely to flare)
  and that the flare stars are younger than the mean active population.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar Flares and the Chromosphere
Authors: Fletcher, L.; Turkmani, R.; Hudson, H. S.; Hawley, S. L.;
   Kowalski, A.; Berlicki, A.; Heinzel, P.
2010arXiv1011.4650F    Altcode:
  A white paper prepared for the Space Studies Board, National Academy
  of Sciences (USA), for its Decadal Survey of Solar and Space Physics
  (Heliophysics), reviewing and encouraging studies of flare physics in
  the chromosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar Flares and the Chromosphere: A white paper for the
    Decadal Survey
Authors: Hudson, H. S.; Fletcher, L.; Turkmani, R.; Hawley, S. L.;
   Kowalski, A. F.; Berlicki, A.; Heinzel, P.
2010helio2010....1H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Milky Way Tomography with SDSS. III. Stellar Kinematics
Authors: Bond, Nicholas A.; Ivezić, Željko; Sesar, Branimir; Jurić,
   Mario; Munn, Jeffrey A.; Kowalski, Adam; Loebman, Sarah; Roškar,
   Rok; Beers, Timothy C.; Dalcanton, Julianne; Rockosi, Constance M.;
   Yanny, Brian; Newberg, Heidi J.; Allende Prieto, Carlos; Wilhelm, Ron;
   Lee, Young Sun; Sivarani, Thirupathi; Majewski, Steven R.; Norris,
   John E.; Bailer-Jones, Coryn A. L.; Re Fiorentin, Paola; Schlegel,
   David; Uomoto, Alan; Lupton, Robert H.; Knapp, Gillian R.; Gunn,
   James E.; Covey, Kevin R.; Allyn Smith, J.; Miknaitis, Gajus; Doi,
   Mamoru; Tanaka, Masayuki; Fukugita, Masataka; Kent, Steve; Finkbeiner,
   Douglas; Quinn, Tom R.; Hawley, Suzanne; Anderson, Scott; Kiuchi,
   Furea; Chen, Alex; Bushong, James; Sohi, Harkirat; Haggard, Daryl;
   Kimball, Amy; McGurk, Rosalie; Barentine, John; Brewington, Howard;
   Harvanek, Mike; Kleinman, Scott; Krzesinski, Jurek; Long, Dan; Nitta,
   Atsuko; Snedden, Stephanie; Lee, Brian; Pier, Jeffrey R.; Harris,
   Hugh; Brinkmann, Jonathan; Schneider, Donald P.
2010ApJ...716....1B    Altcode: 2009arXiv0909.0013B
  We study Milky Way kinematics using a sample of 18.8 million
  main-sequence stars with r &lt; 20 and proper-motion measurements
  derived from Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and POSS astrometry,
  including ~170,000 stars with radial-velocity measurements from the
  SDSS spectroscopic survey. Distances to stars are determined using a
  photometric-parallax relation, covering a distance range from ~100
  pc to 10 kpc over a quarter of the sky at high Galactic latitudes
  (|b|&gt;20°). We find that in the region defined by 1 kpc &lt;Z&lt;
  5 kpc and 3 kpc &lt;R&lt; 13 kpc, the rotational velocity for disk
  stars smoothly decreases, and all three components of the velocity
  dispersion increase, with distance from the Galactic plane. In contrast,
  the velocity ellipsoid for halo stars is aligned with a spherical
  coordinate system and appears to be spatially invariant within the
  probed volume. The velocity distribution of nearby (Z &lt; 1 kpc) K/M
  stars is complex, and cannot be described by a standard Schwarzschild
  ellipsoid. For stars in a distance-limited subsample of stars (&lt;100
  pc), we detect a multi-modal velocity distribution consistent with
  that seen by HIPPARCOS. This strong non-Gaussianity significantly
  affects the measurements of the velocity-ellipsoid tilt and vertex
  deviation when using the Schwarzschild approximation. We develop and
  test a simple descriptive model for the overall kinematic behavior
  that captures these features over most of the probed volume, and can be
  used to search for substructure in kinematic and metallicity space. We
  use this model to predict further improvements in kinematic mapping of
  the Galaxy expected from Gaia and the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A White Light Megaflare on the dM4.5e Star YZ CMi
Authors: Kowalski, Adam F.; Hawley, Suzanne L.; Holtzman, Jon A.;
   Wisniewski, John P.; Hilton, Eric J.
2010ApJ...714L..98K    Altcode: 2010arXiv1003.3057K
  On UT 2009 January 16, we observed a white light megaflare on the dM4.5e
  star YZ CMi as part of a long-term spectroscopic flare-monitoring
  campaign to constrain the spectral shape of optical flare continuum
  emission. Simultaneous U-band photometric and 3350-9260 Å spectroscopic
  observations were obtained during 1.3 hr of the flare decay. The event
  persisted for more than 7 hr and at flare peak, the U-band flux was
  almost 6 mag brighter than in the quiescent state. The properties of
  this flare mark it as one of the most energetic and longest-lasting
  white light flares ever to be observed on an isolated low-mass star. We
  present the U-band flare energetics and a flare continuum analysis. For
  the first time, we show convincingly with spectra that the shape
  of the blue continuum from 3350 Å to 4800 Å can be represented
  as a sum of two components: a Balmer continuum as predicted by the
  Allred et al. radiative hydrodynamic flare models and a T~ 10,000 K
  blackbody emission component as suggested by many previous studies of
  the broadband colors and spectral distributions of flares. The areal
  coverage of the Balmer continuum and blackbody emission regions vary
  during the flare decay, with the Balmer continuum emitting region
  always being significantly (~3-16 times) larger. These data will
  provide critical constraints for understanding the physics underlying
  the mysterious blue continuum radiation in stellar flares. <P />Based on
  observations obtained with the Apache Point Observatory 3.5 m Telescope,
  which is owned and operated by the Astrophysical Research Consortium.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Disk-Loss and Disk-Renewal Phases in Classical Be
    Stars. I. Analysis of Long-Term Spectropolarimetric Data
Authors: Wisniewski, John P.; Draper, Zachary H.; Bjorkman, Karen S.;
   Meade, Marilyn R.; Bjorkman, Jon E.; Kowalski, Adam F.
2010ApJ...709.1306W    Altcode: 2009arXiv0912.1504W
  Classical Be stars are known to occasionally transition from having
  a gaseous circumstellar disk ("Be phase") to a state in which all
  observational evidence for the presence of these disks disappears
  ("normal B-star phase"). We present one of the most comprehensive
  spectropolarimetric views to date of such a transition for two Be
  stars, π Aquarii and 60 Cygni.The disk-loss episode of 60 Cyg was
  characterized by a generally monotonic decrease in emission strength
  over a timescale of ~1000 days from the maximum V-band polarization
  to the minimum Hα equivalent width, consistent with the viscous
  timescale of the disk, assuming α~0.14. π Aqr's disk loss was
  episodic in nature and occurred over a timescale of ~2440 days. An
  observed time lag between the behavior of the polarization and Hα in
  both stars indicates the disk clearing proceeded in an "inside-out"
  manner. We determine the position angle of the intrinsic polarization
  to be 166fdg7 ± 0fdg1 for π Aqr and 107fdg7 ± 0fdg4 for 60 Cyg,
  and model the wavelength dependence of the observed polarization during
  the quiescent diskless phase of each star to determine the interstellar
  polarization along the line of sight. Minor outbursts observed during
  the quiescent phase of each star shared similar lifetimes as those
  previously reported for μ Cen, suggesting that the outbursts represent
  the injection and subsequent viscous dissipation of individual blobs of
  material into the inner circumstellar environments of these stars. We
  also observe deviations from the mean intrinsic polarization position
  angle during polarization outbursts in each star, indicating deviations
  from axisymmetry. We propose that these deviations might be indicative
  of the injection (and subsequent circularization) of new blobs into
  the inner disk, either in the plane of the bulk of the disk material
  or in a slightly inclined (non-coplanar) orbit.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A White Light Megaflare on the dM4.5e Star YZ CMi
Authors: Kowalski, Adam; Hawley, S. L.; Holtzman, J. A.; Wisniewski,
   J. P.; Hilton, E. J.
2010AAS...21542411K    Altcode: 2010BAAS...42..332K
  Due to their strong and persistent surface magnetic fields, some M
  dwarfs frequently produce very explosive and energetic flares in the
  optical and near-UV. However, observations and radiative hydrodynamic
  simulations of flares are in stark disagreement over the type of
  emission which characterizes the continuum at these wavelengths. On
  January 16, 2009, we observed a white light megaflare on the dM4.5e star
  YZ CMi as part of a long-term spectroscopic flare-monitoring campaign
  to constrain the spectral shape of optical flare emission. This flare
  was observed with simultaneous U-band photometry and 3400 A - 9000 A
  spectroscopy with the NMSU 1 m and ARC 3.5 m telescopes at the Apache
  Point Observatory. The event persisted for over 7.5 hours and at the
  flare peak, YZ CMi's U-band flux was 5.8 magnitudes brighter than in
  its quiescent state. The properties of this flare mark it as one of the
  most energetic and long-lasting white light flares ever to be observed
  on an isolated star. We present the detailed light curve properties and
  a time-resolved spectral analysis of the continuum and emission lines
  using over 160 spectra obtained during 1.3 hours of the decay phase of
  the flare, during which there were complex light curve variations with
  the U-band flux still elevated at 15-38 times the quiescent level. <P
  />AFK, SLH, &amp; EJH acknowledge support from NSF grant AST 0807205
  <P />JPW acknowledges support from NSF Astronomy &amp; Astrophysics
  Postdoctoral Fellowship AST 08-02230

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Mysterious Disturbances of Stellar "Frisbees"
Authors: Draper, Zachary H.; Wisniewski, J. P.; Bjorkman, K. S.;
   Meade, M. R.; Kowalski, A. F.; Bjorkman, J. E.
2010AAS...21542824D    Altcode: 2010BAAS...42..348D
  Classical "Be” stars are massive, rapidly rotating stars having
  gaseous circumstellar decretion disks which are known to sometimes
  dissipate and regenerate. Since the mechanism for forming these disks
  is not known, observing these stars when they transition between a
  "Be” phase and a normal B star phase can help constrain what causes
  the disks to form. We have analyzed 15 years of spectroscopic and
  spectropolarimetric data from the Ritter and Pine Bluff Observatories
  of two "Be” stars, 60 Cygni and Pi Aquarii, during which such a
  transition phase from Be to B star occurred. The time-scale of 60
  Cyg's disk loss was 1000 days, during which the disk emission declined
  monotonically, while Pi Aqr's disk loss episode lasted 2440 days and was
  interrupted by two major injection events of new disk material. We used
  the wavelength dependence of polarization during each stars disk-less
  phase to determine the interstellar polarization. Analysis of the
  intrinsic polarization and H-alpha equivalent width measurements show
  that both disks faded in an inside-out manner, with timescales much
  longer than the orbital periods of their binary companions. We also
  detect small deviations away from the overall disk position angle in
  our polarization data; we speculate that this might be indicative
  of either a warp in the inner disk region or the injection of new
  disk material at an inclined orbit to the plane of the pre-existing
  disk. We also present our initial efforts to model time dependent
  behavior of our spectropolarimetric data using 3D Monte Carlo Radiative
  transfer codes. <P />JPW acknowledges support from NSF Astronomy
  &amp; Astrophysics Postdoctoral Fellowship AST 08-02230, and ZHD
  acknowledges support from the UW Pre-MAP program. HPOL observations
  were supported under NASA contract NAS5-26777 with University of
  Wisconsin-Madison. Observations at Ritter Observatory have been
  supported by the NSF under PREST grant AST 04-40784.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: M Dwarf Flares: Exoplanet Implications
Authors: Tofflemire, Benjamin M.; Wisniewski, J. P.; Kowalski, A. F.;
   Schmidt, S. J.; Kundurthy, P.; Hawley, S. L.; Hilton, E. J.
2010AAS...21542315T    Altcode: 2010BAAS...42..328T
  Low mass stars such as M dwarfs are prime targets for exoplanet
  transit searches as their low luminosities and small stellar radii
  could enable detection of super-Earths residing in their habitable
  zones. While promising targets for transit searches, M dwarfs are also
  inherently variable and can exhibit up to 6 magnitude flux enhancements
  in the optical U-band. This is significantly higher than the predicted
  transit depths of super-Earths (0.005 magnitude flux decrease). The
  behavior of flares at IR wavelengths, particularly those likely to
  be used to study and characterize M dwarf exoplanets using facilities
  such as JWST, remains largely unknown. To address these uncertainties,
  we have executed a coordinated, contemporaneous monitoring program of
  the optical and IR flux of M dwarfs known to regularly flare. A suite
  of telescopes located at the Kitt Peak National Observatory and the
  Apache Point Observatory were used for the observations. We present
  the initial results of this program and discuss how flare events could
  influence future exoplanet detection and characterization studies
  in the IR. <P />JPW acknowledges support from a NSF Astronomy and
  Astrophysics Postdoctoral Fellowship, AST 08-02230.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Continued Optical to Mid-IR Evolution of V838 Monocerotis
Authors: Loebman, Sarah; Wisniewski, J. P.; Kowalski, A. F.; Barry,
   R. K.; Bjorkman, K. S.; Bond, H. E.; Clampin, M.; Hammel, H. B.;
   Hawley, S. L.; Lynch, D. K.; Munshi, F. A.; Russell, R. W.; Schmidt,
   S. J.; Sitko, M. L.
2010AAS...21543115L    Altcode: 2010BAAS...42..364L
  V838 Monocerotis is an eruptive variable which gained notoriety in
  2002 when it brightened by 9 magnitudes in a series of outbursts,
  and eventually developed a spectacular light echo. The star's mid-IR
  flux increased by a factor of 2 between 2004 and 2007, suggesting that
  new dust was condensing from the expanding ejecta of the outbursts,
  while more recent optical spectroscopic observations suggest that these
  expanding ejecta have engulfed the system's B3V binary companion. We
  present new optical, near-IR, and mid-IR spectroscopic and mid-IR
  photometric observations of V838 Monocerotis obtained between 2008-2009
  at the Apache Point Observatory 3.5m, NASA IRTF 3m, and Gemini South 8m
  telescopes. We discuss the chemistry and continued evolution of recently
  formed dust in the system in the context of previously published
  photometric, spectroscopic, and spectro-polarimetric observations of
  the system. <P />This work is supported at The Aerospace Corporation
  by the Independent Research and Development program; JPW acknowledges
  support from a NSF Astronomy &amp; Astrophysics Postdoctoral Fellowship,
  AST 08-02230.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Flares on M Dwarfs from a Time-Resolved SDSS Spectral Sample
Authors: Hilton, Eric J.; Hawley, S. L.; West, A. A.; Kowalski, A. F.
2010AAS...21542410H    Altcode: 2010BAAS...42..332H
  We present flare rates and analysis of individual flares using
  time-resolved spectra of M dwarfs from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
  Data Release 5. Each of the 40,000 M dwarf spectra from the West et
  al. (2008) DR5 sample represents a co-addition of several shorter
  (9-15 min) spectra. We analyze nearly 200,000 of these short spectra,
  subdividing them by spectral type and by signal-to-noise ratio and use
  statistical methods to assign variability and flaring status. These
  data allow us to investigate the spectroscopic time-domain properties
  of low-mass stars.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: LSST Science Book, Version 2.0
Authors: LSST Science Collaboration; Abell, Paul A.; Allison, Julius;
   Anderson, Scott F.; Andrew, John R.; Angel, J. Roger P.; Armus, Lee;
   Arnett, David; Asztalos, S. J.; Axelrod, Tim S.; Bailey, Stephen;
   Ballantyne, D. R.; Bankert, Justin R.; Barkhouse, Wayne A.; Barr,
   Jeffrey D.; Barrientos, L. Felipe; Barth, Aaron J.; Bartlett, James
   G.; Becker, Andrew C.; Becla, Jacek; Beers, Timothy C.; Bernstein,
   Joseph P.; Biswas, Rahul; Blanton, Michael R.; Bloom, Joshua S.;
   Bochanski, John J.; Boeshaar, Pat; Borne, Kirk D.; Bradac, Marusa;
   Brandt, W. N.; Bridge, Carrie R.; Brown, Michael E.; Brunner, Robert
   J.; Bullock, James S.; Burgasser, Adam J.; Burge, James H.; Burke,
   David L.; Cargile, Phillip A.; Chandrasekharan, Srinivasan; Chartas,
   George; Chesley, Steven R.; Chu, You-Hua; Cinabro, David; Claire,
   Mark W.; Claver, Charles F.; Clowe, Douglas; Connolly, A. J.; Cook,
   Kem H.; Cooke, Jeff; Cooray, Asantha; Covey, Kevin R.; Culliton,
   Christopher S.; de Jong, Roelof; de Vries, Willem H.; Debattista,
   Victor P.; Delgado, Francisco; Dell'Antonio, Ian P.; Dhital, Saurav;
   Di Stefano, Rosanne; Dickinson, Mark; Dilday, Benjamin; Djorgovski,
   S. G.; Dobler, Gregory; Donalek, Ciro; Dubois-Felsmann, Gregory;
   Durech, Josef; Eliasdottir, Ardis; Eracleous, Michael; Eyer, Laurent;
   Falco, Emilio E.; Fan, Xiaohui; Fassnacht, Christopher D.; Ferguson,
   Harry C.; Fernandez, Yanga R.; Fields, Brian D.; Finkbeiner, Douglas;
   Figueroa, Eduardo E.; Fox, Derek B.; Francke, Harold; Frank, James
   S.; Frieman, Josh; Fromenteau, Sebastien; Furqan, Muhammad; Galaz,
   Gaspar; Gal-Yam, A.; Garnavich, Peter; Gawiser, Eric; Geary, John;
   Gee, Perry; Gibson, Robert R.; Gilmore, Kirk; Grace, Emily A.; Green,
   Richard F.; Gressler, William J.; Grillmair, Carl J.; Habib, Salman;
   Haggerty, J. S.; Hamuy, Mario; Harris, Alan W.; Hawley, Suzanne L.;
   Heavens, Alan F.; Hebb, Leslie; Henry, Todd J.; Hileman, Edward;
   Hilton, Eric J.; Hoadley, Keri; Holberg, J. B.; Holman, Matt J.;
   Howell, Steve B.; Infante, Leopoldo; Ivezic, Zeljko; Jacoby, Suzanne
   H.; Jain, Bhuvnesh; R; Jedicke; Jee, M. James; Garrett Jernigan,
   J.; Jha, Saurabh W.; Johnston, Kathryn V.; Jones, R. Lynne; Juric,
   Mario; Kaasalainen, Mikko; Styliani; Kafka; Kahn, Steven M.; Kaib,
   Nathan A.; Kalirai, Jason; Kantor, Jeff; Kasliwal, Mansi M.; Keeton,
   Charles R.; Kessler, Richard; Knezevic, Zoran; Kowalski, Adam;
   Krabbendam, Victor L.; Krughoff, K. Simon; Kulkarni, Shrinivas;
   Kuhlman, Stephen; Lacy, Mark; Lepine, Sebastien; Liang, Ming;
   Lien, Amy; Lira, Paulina; Long, Knox S.; Lorenz, Suzanne; Lotz,
   Jennifer M.; Lupton, R. H.; Lutz, Julie; Macri, Lucas M.; Mahabal,
   Ashish A.; Mandelbaum, Rachel; Marshall, Phil; May, Morgan; McGehee,
   Peregrine M.; Meadows, Brian T.; Meert, Alan; Milani, Andrea; Miller,
   Christopher J.; Miller, Michelle; Mills, David; Minniti, Dante; Monet,
   David; Mukadam, Anjum S.; Nakar, Ehud; Neill, Douglas R.; Newman,
   Jeffrey A.; Nikolaev, Sergei; Nordby, Martin; O'Connor, Paul; Oguri,
   Masamune; Oliver, John; Olivier, Scot S.; Olsen, Julia K.; Olsen,
   Knut; Olszewski, Edward W.; Oluseyi, Hakeem; Padilla, Nelson D.;
   Parker, Alex; Pepper, Joshua; Peterson, John R.; Petry, Catherine;
   Pinto, Philip A.; Pizagno, James L.; Popescu, Bogdan; Prsa, Andrej;
   Radcka, Veljko; Raddick, M. Jordan; Rasmussen, Andrew; Rau, Arne; Rho,
   Jeonghee; Rhoads, James E.; Richards, Gordon T.; Ridgway, Stephen
   T.; Robertson, Brant E.; Roskar, Rok; Saha, Abhijit; Sarajedini,
   Ata; Scannapieco, Evan; Schalk, Terry; Schindler, Rafe; Schmidt,
   Samuel; Schmidt, Sarah; Schneider, Donald P.; Schumacher, German;
   Scranton, Ryan; Sebag, Jacques; Seppala, Lynn G.; Shemmer, Ohad;
   Simon, Joshua D.; Sivertz, M.; Smith, Howard A.; Allyn Smith, J.;
   Smith, Nathan; Spitz, Anna H.; Stanford, Adam; Stassun, Keivan G.;
   Strader, Jay; Strauss, Michael A.; Stubbs, Christopher W.; Sweeney,
   Donald W.; Szalay, Alex; Szkody, Paula; Takada, Masahiro; Thorman,
   Paul; Trilling, David E.; Trimble, Virginia; Tyson, Anthony; Van
   Berg, Richard; Vanden Berk, Daniel; VanderPlas, Jake; Verde, Licia;
   Vrsnak, Bojan; Walkowicz, Lucianne M.; Wandelt, Benjamin D.; Wang,
   Sheng; Wang, Yun; Warner, Michael; Wechsler, Risa H.; West, Andrew
   A.; Wiecha, Oliver; Williams, Benjamin F.; Willman, Beth; Wittman,
   David; Wolff, Sidney C.; Wood-Vasey, W. Michael; Wozniak, Przemek;
   Young, Patrick; Zentner, Andrew; Zhan, Hu
2009arXiv0912.0201L    Altcode:
  A survey that can cover the sky in optical bands over wide fields to
  faint magnitudes with a fast cadence will enable many of the exciting
  science opportunities of the next decade. The Large Synoptic Survey
  Telescope (LSST) will have an effective aperture of 6.7 meters and an
  imaging camera with field of view of 9.6 deg^2, and will be devoted
  to a ten-year imaging survey over 20,000 deg^2 south of +15 deg. Each
  pointing will be imaged 2000 times with fifteen second exposures in six
  broad bands from 0.35 to 1.1 microns, to a total point-source depth
  of r~27.5. The LSST Science Book describes the basic parameters of
  the LSST hardware, software, and observing plans. The book discusses
  educational and outreach opportunities, then goes on to describe
  a broad range of science that LSST will revolutionize: mapping the
  inner and outer Solar System, stellar populations in the Milky Way and
  nearby galaxies, the structure of the Milky Way disk and halo and other
  objects in the Local Volume, transient and variable objects both at low
  and high redshift, and the properties of normal and active galaxies at
  low and high redshift. It then turns to far-field cosmological topics,
  exploring properties of supernovae to z~1, strong and weak lensing,
  the large-scale distribution of galaxies and baryon oscillations, and
  how these different probes may be combined to constrain cosmological
  models and the physics of dark energy.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: M Dwarfs in Sloan Digital Sky Survey Stripe 82: Photometric
    Light Curves and Flare Rate Analysis
Authors: Kowalski, Adam F.; Hawley, Suzanne L.; Hilton, Eric J.;
   Becker, Andrew C.; West, Andrew A.; Bochanski, John J.; Sesar, Branimir
2009AJ....138..633K    Altcode: 2009arXiv0906.2030K
  We present a flare rate analysis of 50,130 M dwarf light curves in
  Sloan Digital Sky Survey Stripe 82. We identified 271 flares using
  a customized variability index to search ~2.5 million photometric
  observations for flux increases in the u and g bands. Every image
  of a flaring observation was examined by eye and with a point-spread
  function-matching and image subtraction tool to guard against false
  positives. Flaring is found to be strongly correlated with the
  appearance of Hα in emission in the quiet spectrum. Of the 99 flare
  stars that have spectra, we classify eight as relatively inactive. The
  flaring fraction is found to increase strongly in stars with redder
  colors during quiescence, which can be attributed to the increasing
  flare visibility and increasing active fraction for redder stars. The
  flaring fraction is strongly correlated with |Z| distance such that
  most stars that flare are within 300 pc of the Galactic plane. We derive
  flare u-band luminosities and find that the most luminous flares occur
  on the earlier-type m dwarfs. Our best estimate of the lower limit
  on the flaring rate (averaged over Stripe 82) for flares with Δu
  &gt;= 0.7 mag on stars with u &lt; 22 is 1.3 flares hr<SUP>-1</SUP>
  deg<SUP>-2</SUP> but can vary significantly with the line of sight. <P
  />Based on observations obtained with the Apache Point Observatory
  3.5 m telescope, which is owned and operated by the Astrophysical
  Research Consortium.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: M Dwarf Flares: Exoplanet Implications
Authors: Wisniewski, John; Kowalski, Adam; Schmidt, Sarah; Hawley,
   Suzanne; Kundurthy, Praveen
2009noao.prop..280W    Altcode:
  Low mass M dwarfs are attractive stars for exoplanet transit research as
  their low luminosities and small stellar radii could enable detection
  of super-Earths residing in their habitable zones using existing
  technology. Future IR facilities such as JWST will undoubtedly attempt
  to characterize these systems through detailed transit observations. M
  dwarfs can exhibit highly energetic flare events which cause &lt;0.1
  to 6.0 magnitude flux enhancements in the optical U-band, which is
  significantly higher than the predicted transit depths of super- Earths
  (~0.005 magnitude flux decrease). While Solar flares have been observed
  to cause IR continuum enhancements (Xu et al 2006); surprisingly, it is
  not known whether energetic flares associated with M dwarfs similarly
  induce IR variability. We propose to contemporaneously monitor the
  optical &amp; IR flux of two M dwarfs known to regularly flare, to
  determine what effect flares could have on future IR characterization
  studies of M dwarf exoplanets.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Short Period Variability Of An M-dwarf In SDSS Stripe-82
Authors: Munshi, Ferah; Becker, A.; Hawley, S. L.; Bochanski, J. J.;
   Sesar, B.; Kowalski, A.
2009AAS...21443007M    Altcode:
  We present analysis of a unique short-period object selected from the
  SDSS-II Stripe 82 photometric time-domain database. This object stands
  out in color-period space, having the colors and spectrum of an early
  M-dwarf (M0-M1) but a photometric period of 0.1 days, an amplitude of
  0.2 magnitudes, and a sinusoidal lightcurve. It is unusual to find
  <P />such a red object with such a short period. We have obtained
  multiple epochs of spectroscopy with the MAGE spectrograph at Magellan
  to constrain any radial velocity variations. We examine the possible
  <P />interpretations of this system, including : an M-dwarf/M-dwarf
  eclipsing system, which would be near the Algol limit; stellar rotation
  with persistent star spots; and stellar pulsation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Contemporaneous Optical and IR Spectroscopy of Be Star
    Circumstellar Disks
Authors: Hesselbach, Erica; Bjorkman, K. S.; Wisniewski, J. P.;
   Kowalski, A. F.
2009AAS...21430104H    Altcode:
  Double-peaked hydrogen emission line profiles in classical Be stars
  can be significantly asymmetric, and these asymmetries can vary in
  a quasi-periodic manner with periods of several years. This has been
  interpreted as evidence of one-armed density waves in the circumstellar
  disks surrounding these stars. The density structure of these disks can
  be explored as a function of radius by observing contemporaneously the
  profile shapes of the hydrogen lines appearing in the optical and near
  infrared. Observations of 33 bright Be stars monitored in the optical
  at Ritter Observatory and in the near-IR using the NASA IRTF with SpeX
  between September 2005 and January 2008 are presented. A range of common
  Be star line profile shapes are represented, including some stars whose
  asymmetric profiles are known to vary quasi-periodically. Correlations
  between optical and IR hydrogen lines will be discussed and implications
  for one-armed density wave models will be considered. <P />We thank
  the NASA IRTF for observing time allocations and support. We thank
  the Ritter observing team, and especially Nancy Morrison, for crucial
  assistance with the supporting optical observations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: M Dwarf Flares from Time-Resolved SDSS Spectra
Authors: Hilton, Eric J.; Hawley, Suzanne; West, Andrew A.; Kowalski,
   Adam
2009AIPC.1094..652H    Altcode: 2009csss...15..652H
  Flares on low-mass dwarfs are a major source of variability in
  the optical and UV in the Galaxy. In addition to being a source of
  optical transients, these flares may have an important effect on
  the habitability of planets orbiting low-mass dwarfs. We present a
  study of flares on M dwarfs determined from Sloan Digital Sky Survey
  time-resolved spectra. Our sample consists of tens of thousands of M
  dwarfs whose SDSS spectra were formed from co-adds of several (typically
  3-5) consecutive shorter (typically 9-15 minute) exposures. We present
  the Flare Line Index as a way to identify flares in these individual
  component spectra with crude time-resolution, and investigate the
  short-term variability of the Balmer and Ca II emission lines.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Diagnosing the Structure of the HD 163296 Protoplanetary Disk
    via Coronagraphic Imaging Polarimetry
Authors: Kowalski, Adam F.; Wisniewski, John P.; Clampin, Mark; Grady,
   Carol A.; Sitko, Michael L.; Bjorkman, Karen S.; Fukagawa, Misato;
   Hines, Dean C.; Katoh, Eri; Whitney, Barbara A.
2009AIPC.1094..393K    Altcode: 2009csss...15..393K
  We report our initial analysis of the H-band polarized and total
  intensity of the nearby Herbig Ae star HD 163296, and characterize
  the morphology of the scattered light disk in the context of previous
  optical HST coronagraphic imagery. Our observations were obtained
  as part of a multi-epoch campaign designed to diagnose and correlate
  the behavior of the inner and outer regions of select protoplanetary
  disks. This campaign will help test recent suggestions (Sitko et
  al. 2008; Wisniewski et al. 2008) that the HD 163296 disk experiences
  the novel phenomenon of time-variable self-shadowing, whereby occasional
  changes in the scale height of the inner disk wall induce changes in
  the illumination of the outer disk.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Understanding Activity in Low Mass Stars
Authors: Browning, Matthew K.; Walkowicz, Lucianne M.; West, Andrew
   A.; Basri, Gibor; Browning, Matthew K.; Kowalski, Adam F.; Hilton,
   Eric; Bouchanski, John J.
2009astro2010S..30B    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Flare Rates on M Dwarfs: Observing Program
Authors: Hilton, Eric J.; Hawley, S.; Ule, N.; Kowalski, A.; Gomez,
   T.; Grammer, S.; Holtzman, J.; Huang, M.; Huehnerhoff, J.; Morgan, D.
2009AAS...21343416H    Altcode: 2009BAAS...41..305H
  Determining the magnitude and rate at which low mass stars flare is
  an important problem in stellar astrophysics because flares are a
  major source of variability in large time domain surveys, affect the
  atmospheres of orbiting planetary systems, and are manifestations
  of magnetic field production and reconfiguration, processes which
  are not well understood on M dwarfs. We present early results from
  a multi-year observing campaign to statistically determine M dwarf
  flare rates and energies as a function of spectral type and activity
  level. Our observations consist of over 100 hours of monitoring M
  dwarfs on three telescopes. In addition to preliminary flare rates,
  we discuss our method of determining energy and duration.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Multi-Epoch Coronagraphic Imaging of Herbig Ae Circumstellar
    Disk Systems
Authors: Wisniewski, John P.; Clampin, M.; Grady, C. A.; Sitko, M. L.;
   Bjorkman, K. S.; Kowalski, A. F.; Fukagawa, M.; Hines, D. C.; Katoh,
   E.; Whitney, B. A.
2009AAS...21340906W    Altcode: 2009BAAS...41..208W
  We present multi-epoch coronagraphic imaging polarimetry observations
  of select Herbig Ae stars, based on data obtained with UKIRT's
  Imager-Spectrometer (UIST). We will focus on the HD 163296 system,
  whose spatially resolved scattered light disk exhibited variability in
  multi-epoch HST coronagraphic observations, possibly due to variable
  self-shadowing induced by changes in the structure of the inner disk
  wall (Wisniewski et al 2008; Sitko et al 2008). The morphology and
  surface brightness of the scattered light disk from our 2008-epoch J-
  and H-band UKIRT data will be compared against our 2007-epoch H-band
  UKIRT data to further diagnose the variability of this system. <P
  />J.P. Wisniewski acknowledges the support of a NSF Astronomy &amp;
  Astrophysics Postdoctoral Fellowship (0802230).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: M Dwarf Flare Rate Analysis of SDSS Stripe 82
Authors: Kowalski, Adam; Hawley, S. L.; Hilton, E. J.; Becker, A. C.;
   Bochanski, J. J.; West, A. A.
2009AAS...21343402K    Altcode: 2009BAAS...41..303K
  M dwarfs produce intense flares from the X-ray to the radio,
  including the optical by a physical mechanism which is still poorly
  understood. Since M dwarfs comprise about 70% of the stars in the
  Galaxy, their flares will be a significant source of optical transients
  in future time domain surveys, such as LSST, Pan-STARRS, and GAIA. Using
  a Flare Index to select flaring events from 40,000 low-cadence M dwarf
  light curves, we present the flaring rate as a function of intrinsic
  stellar properties, such as spectral type, level of magnetic activity,
  and distance from the Galactic plane. We also discuss our results
  in light of our understanding of flare physics and how our derived
  flaring rates and luminosities compare to the Lacy, Moffett, &amp;
  Evans (1976) classical study of nearby active flare stars.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The size distributions of asteroid families in the SDSS Moving
    Object Catalog 4
Authors: Parker, A.; Ivezić, Ž.; Jurić, M.; Lupton, R.; Sekora,
   M. D.; Kowalski, A.
2008Icar..198..138P    Altcode: 2008arXiv0807.3762P
  Asteroid families, traditionally defined as clusters of objects in
  orbital parameter space, often have distinctive optical colors. We
  show that the separation of family members from background interlopers
  can be improved with the aid of SDSS colors as a qualifier for family
  membership. Based on an ∼88,000 object subset of the Sloan Digital Sky
  Survey Moving Object Catalog 4 with available proper orbital elements,
  we define 37 statistically robust asteroid families with at least 100
  members (12 families have over 1000 members) using a simple Gaussian
  distribution model in both orbital and color space. The interloper
  rejection rate based on colors is typically ∼10% for a given orbital
  family definition, with four families that can be reliably isolated
  only with the aid of colors. About 50% of all objects in this data
  set belong to families, and this fraction varies from about 35% for
  objects brighter than an H magnitude of 13 and rises to 60% for objects
  fainter than this. The fraction of C-type objects in families decreases
  with increasing H magnitude for H&gt;13, while the fraction of S-type
  objects above this limit remains effectively constant. This suggests
  that S-type objects require a shorter timescale for equilibrating the
  background and family size distributions via collisional processing. The
  size distribution varies significantly among families, and is typically
  different from size distributions for background populations. The
  size distributions for 15 families display a well-defined change of
  slope and can be modeled as a "broken" double power-law. Such "broken"
  size distributions are twice as likely for S-type familes than for
  C-type families (73% vs. 36%), and are dominated by dynamically old
  families. The remaining families with size distributions that can be
  modeled as a single power law are dominated by young families (&lt;1
  Gyr). When size distribution requires a double power-law model, the
  two slopes are correlated and are steeper for S-type families. No
  such slope-color correlation is discernible for families whose size
  distribution follows a single power law. For several very populous
  families, we find that the size distribution varies with the distance
  from the core in orbital-color space, such that small objects are more
  prevalent in the family outskirts. This "size sorting" is consistent
  with predictions based on the Yarkovsky effect.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: First Science Results from the UKIRT UIST Coronagraphic
    Imaging Polarimeter
Authors: Wisniewski, John P.; Kowalski, A. F.; Clampin, M.; Grady,
   C. A.; Sitko, M. L.; Bjorkman, K. S.; Hines, D. C.; Whitney, B. A.
2007AAS...211.5010W    Altcode: 2007BAAS...39..813W
  We present the first science results from the newly commissioned
  coronagraphic imaging polarimetry mode of UKIRT's Imager-Spectrometer
  (UIST). Our pilot science program is designed to begin to trace
  the evolution of the spatial and size distribution of dust grains
  in protoplanetary disk systems. The initial observations obtained
  as part of this program, at H-band, have spatially resolved the
  scattered light disk associated with a nearby Herbig Ae star. We
  characterize the morphology of the disk in our H-band coronagraphic
  imaging polarimetry observations, compare these results to archival
  optical HST coronagraphic imagery, and discuss the possible origins
  of morphological structures seen in these data. <P />J.P. Wisniewski
  acknowledges the support of a NPP Fellowship at NASA GSFC, via award
  NNH06CC03B.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Galactic M Dwarf Flare Rates
Authors: Hawley, Suzanne L.; Hilton, E. J.; Kowalski, A. F.; Bochanski,
   J. J.; West, A. A.
2007AAS...21110306H    Altcode: 2007BAAS...39..920H
  We present preliminary results from our effort to model M dwarf flare
  rates in the Galaxy. Using existing flare data and new determinations of
  the M dwarf luminosity function and activity fractions from SDSS data,
  we have developed numerical simulations to model the number of flares
  seen along a given Galactic sightline. We compare the simulations with
  data from the SDSS repeat scans obtained in the equatorial region. These
  simulations will be useful for predicting the detection of M dwarf
  variability in new time domain surveys such as PanSTARRs and LSST. <P
  />Based on data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (www.sdss.org)

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Toward Mapping the Detailed Density Structure of Classical
    Be Circumstellar Disks
Authors: Wisniewski, J. P.; Kowalski, A. F.; Bjorkman, K. S.; Bjorkman,
   J. E.
2007ASPC..361..524W    Altcode:
  We present the preliminary results of near contemporaneous optical and
  infrared spectroscopic observations of selected classical Be stars. We
  find strong evidence of oppositely oriented V/R hydrogen line profiles
  in the optical versus infrared spectra of ζ Tau, and briefly discuss
  how sustained contemporaneous optical and infrared spectroscopic
  observations might enable us to trace the detailed density structure
  of classical Be circumstellar disks.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Toward Mapping the Detailed Density Structure of Classical
    Be Circumstellar Disks
Authors: Wisniewski, J. P.; Kowalski, A. F.; Bjorkman, K. S.; Bjorkman,
   J. E.; Carciofi, A. C.
2007ApJ...656L..21W    Altcode: 2007astro.ph..1010W
  The first results from a near-contemporaneous optical and infrared
  spectroscopic observing program designed to probe the detailed density
  structure of classical Be circumstellar disks are presented. We report
  the discovery of asymmetrical infrared emission lines of He I, O I,
  Fe II, and the Brackett, Paschen, and Pfund series lines of H I that
  exhibit an opposite V/R orientation (V&gt;R) to that observed for
  the optical Balmer Hα line (V&lt;R) in the classical Be star ζ
  Tau. We interpret these data as evidence that the density wave that
  characterizes ζ Tau's disk has a significantly different average
  azimuthal morphology in the inner disk region as compared to the outer
  disk region. A follow-up multiwavelength observational campaign to trace
  the temporal evolution of these line profile morphologies, along with
  detailed theoretical modeling, is suggested to test this hypothesis.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Flare Rate Analysis of M-Dwarf Lightcurves
Authors: Kowalski, Adam F.; Hilton, E. J.; Becker, A. C.; Hawley, S. L.
2006AAS...209.8907K    Altcode: 2006BAAS...38.1025K
  We present a preliminary variability index analysis of lightcurves of
  several thousand M-dwarfs extracted from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
  Equatorial Stripe. These objects have been subclassed by magnetic
  activity and spectral type. This analysis will provide the rates of
  flaring activity as a function of the above parameters as well as
  characterizing the colors of these stars while active. M-dwarf flare
  rates will be applicable to next-generation time domain surveys such
  as the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope by predicting the fraction
  of observed variable objects that are flaring M-dwarfs and not other
  cosmological transients.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Circumstellar Disks in the IR: Identification of New Systems
    and Evidence of Complex Density Structures
Authors: Wisniewski, J. P.; Kowalski, A. F.; Bjorkman, K. S.; Bjorkman,
   J. E.
2005AAS...206.0803W    Altcode: 2005BAAS...37Q.440W
  We use 0.8-2.4 micron spectroscopy to explore the circumstellar
  environments of a small sample of stars in the Galactic clusters
  NGC 2186 and NGC 2439 that were previously identified as excess Hα
  emitters from 2-color diagram photometric observations. We detect
  both H I and various metal emission lines in ∼60% of our sample,
  indicating that these objects do have circumstellar disks. Analysis of
  line profile morphologies suggests the presence of a one-armed spiral
  density wave in at least one circumstellar disk system. Furthermore,
  we find the V/R ratios of the H I Brackett emission lines are opposite
  those of the Fe II emission lines in this particular system, implying
  that our observations may be used to probe the structure of the spiral
  density wave as a function of disk radius. <P />We also present
  initial results of near contemporaneous optical and 0.8-2.4 micron
  spectroscopic observations of several known Galactic classical Be
  stars. Theoretical line profile calculations (Waters &amp; Marlborough
  1992) predict scenarios in which one should observe the V/R ratios of
  the optical Hα and IR H lines to be oppositely oriented; we believe
  we have found conclusive evidence of this in our observations of Zeta
  Tau. We discuss our efforts to use these line strengths and profiles
  to constrain the density structure and fundamental parameters of these
  circumstellar disks. <P />Observations were obtained using the SpeX
  instrument at the NASA IRTF on Mauna Kea, Hawaii. This work has been
  supported in part by grants from the NASA LTSA, NASA GSRP, Sigma Xi
  GIAR, and NSF REU programs. KSB is a Cottrell Scholar of the Research
  Corporation and gratefully acknowledges their support.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Quantitative indicator for semiquantum chaos
Authors: Kowalski, A. M.; Martin, M. T.; Nuñez, J.; Plastino, A.;
   Proto, A. N.
1998PhRvA..58.2596K    Altcode:
  By generalizing to a mixed-state environment the treatment recently
  given to a model advanced by Cooper et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 72, 1337
  (1994)], we show that some characteristics of the so-called semiquantum
  chaos can be described by recourse to a special motion invariant of
  the problem, that thus becomes a chaos indicator.