A single power law for the TRAPPIST-1 flare distribution across four orders of magnitude in energy
Valeriy Vasilyev, Alexander I. Shapiro, Nadiia Kostogryz, Chia-Lung Lin, Greg Kopp + 7 more
TLDR
Researchers found a single power law describes TRAPPIST-1's flare frequency distribution over four orders of magnitude in energy.
Key contributions
- Unified flare-frequency distribution (FFD) created using JWST/NIRISS, NIRSpec, and Kepler/K2 data.
- All flare events converted to TESS bandpass energy for consistent cross-dataset comparison.
- FFD follows a single power law, N(≥E) ∝ E⁻ᵝ, with β=0.753 over 10²⁹-10³³ erg.
- Rare, high-energy flares dominate TRAPPIST-1's total time-averaged flare energy budget.
Why it matters
This unified flare distribution is crucial for understanding TRAPPIST-1 exoplanet atmospheres and their evolution. It provides a practical basis for planning JWST observations and accurately modeling planetary irradiation.
Original Abstract
TRAPPIST-1 is an ultra-cool dwarf that flares frequently. These flares shape the surrounding planets' high-energy irradiation environments, with consequences for atmospheric chemistry and escape, and they can contaminate transmission spectroscopy of those planets. A quantitative flare-frequency distribution (FFD) spanning the full energy range is therefore essential for both interpreting JWST spectra and modeling the planets' irradiation histories. Here we present a unified FFD over four orders of magnitude in energy by jointly analyzing $\approx$87\,hr of JWST/NIRISS and JWST/NIRSpec time-series spectroscopy together with $\approx$74\,days of \textit{Kepler}/K2 photometry. To enable a consistent comparison across these heterogeneous datasets, we convert all events to energies in the TESS bandpass. For the Kepler-to-TESS conversion we adopt a cooler flare continuum appropriate for ultra-cool dwarfs ($T_{\rm flare}=3500$\,K). After correcting for flare-detection sensitivities, the combined JWST+K2 cumulative FFD is consistent with a single power law, $N(\ge E_\mathrm{TESS})\propto E_\mathrm{TESS}^{-β}$, with $β=0.753$ over $E_{\rm TESS}\simeq10^{29}$-$10^{33}$\,erg. The slope of the distribution indicates that the time-averaged flare energy budget is dominated by rare, high-energy events rather than by the more numerous low-energy flares. This bandpass-consistent FFD provides a practical basis for JWST transit-spectroscopy planning and for modeling the flare-driven irradiation environment of the TRAPPIST-1 planets.
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