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The Muscles Treasury Survey. I. Motivation and OverviewGround- 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 Lyalpha) 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 (is equivalent to 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 (approximately equal 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 per (sq cm) s 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)(UV) approximately 0.3 L(sub *) delta (t) (delta t = 1 s). Finally, we interpret enhanced L(line)/L(sub Bol) 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)/A(sub plan)) with the transition regions of their host stars.
Document ID
20170002790
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
France, Kevin
(Colorado Univ. Boulder, CO, United States)
Loyd, R. O. Parke
(Colorado Univ. Boulder, CO, United States)
Youngblood, Allison
(Colorado Univ. Boulder, CO, United States)
Brown, Alexander
(Colorado Univ. Boulder, CO, United States)
Schneider, P. Christian
(European Space Research and Technology Centre Noordwijk, Netherlands)
Hawley, Suzanne L.
(Washington Univ. Seattle, WA, United States)
Froning, Cynthia S.
(Texas Univ. Austin, TX, United States)
Linsky, Jeffrey L.
(Colorado Univ. Boulder, CO, United States)
Roberge, Aki
(NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, MD United States)
Buccino, Andrea P.
(Instituto de Astronomia y Fisica del Espacio Buenos Aires, Argentina)
Date Acquired
March 31, 2017
Publication Date
March 22, 2016
Publication Information
Publication: The Astrophysical Journal
Publisher: AAS/IOP Publishing partnership
Volume: 820
Issue: 2
Subject Category
Astrophysics
Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration
Report/Patent Number
GSFC-E-DAA-TN40942
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NSF AST 13-11678
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNX16AC09G
CONTRACT_GRANT: GO5-16155X
CONTRACT_GRANT: GO4-15014X
CONTRACT_GRANT: MEC 20131029170
CONTRACT_GRANT: HST-GO-13650.01
CONTRACT_GRANT: HST-GO-12464.01
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNSFC 41175039
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other
Keywords
Infrared and astrophysically inaccessible wavelengths (EUV and Ly)

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