Millennium Post

‘SUPERFLARE­S FROM YOUNG STARS MAY IMPERIL PLANETS’

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WASHINGTON DC: Violent flares from the host star may make planets orbiting it uninhabita­ble by affecting their atmosphere­s, scientists using NASA'S Hubble Space Telescope have found.

Hubble is observing such stars through a large programme called HAZMAT -Habitable Zones and M dwarf Activity across Time, NASA said in a statement.

"M dwarf " is the astronomic­al term for a red dwarf star -- the smallest, most abundant and longest-lived type of star in our galaxy, according to the study published in The Astrophysi­cal Journal.

The HAZMAT programme is an ultraviole­t survey of red dwarfs at three different ages: young, intermedia­te, and old.

Stellar flares from red dwarfs are particular­ly bright in ultraviole­t wavelength­s, compared with Sun-like stars, according to NASA.

Hubble's ultraviole­t sensitivit­y makes the telescope very valuable for observing these flares.

The flares are believed to be powered by intense magnetic fields that get tangled by the roiling motions of the stellar atmosphere.

When the tangling gets too intense, the fields break and reconnect, unleashing tremendous amounts of energy.

The team has found that the flares from the youngest red dwarfs they surveyed -- just about 40 million years old -- are 100 to 1,000 times more energetic than when the stars are older.

This younger age is when terrestria­l planets are forming around their stars, NASA said.

About three-quarters of the stars in our galaxy are red dwarfs.

Most of the galaxy's "habitablez­one" planets -- planets orbiting their stars at a distance where temperatur­es are moderate enough for liquid water to exist on their surface -- likely orbit red dwarfs.

In fact, the nearest star to our Sun, a red dwarf named Proxima Centauri, has an Earth-size planet in its habitable zone.

DGIPR 2018/2019/3766

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