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posted by Fnord666 on Wednesday February 28 2018, @05:17AM   Printer-friendly
from the SPF-one-million dept.

Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story:

A team of astronomers led by Carnegie's Meredith MacGregor and Alycia Weinberger detected a massive stellar flare -- an energetic explosion of radiation -- from the closest star to our own Sun, Proxima Centauri, which occurred last March. This finding, published in Astrophysical Journal Letters, raises questions about the habitability of our Solar System's nearest exoplanetary neighbor, Proxima b, which orbits Proxima Centauri.

MacGregor, Weinberger and their colleagues -- the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics' David Wilner and Adam Kowalski and Steven Cranmer of the University of Colorado Boulder -- discovered the enormous flare when they reanalyzed observations taken last year by Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array, or ALMA, a radio telescope made up of 66 antennae.

At peak luminosity it was 10 times brighter than our Sun's largest flares when observed at similar wavelengths. Stellar flares have not been well studied at the wavelengths detected by ALMA, especially around stars of Proxima Centauri's type, called M dwarfs, which are the most common in our galaxy.

"March 24, 2017 was no ordinary day for Proxima Cen," said lead author MacGregor.

The flare increased Proxima Centauri's brightness by 1,000 times over 10 seconds. This was preceded by a smaller flare; taken together, the whole event lasted fewer than two minutes of the 10 hours that ALMA observed the star between January and March of last year.

[...] "It's likely that Proxima b was blasted by high energy radiation during this flare," MacGregor explained, adding that it was already known that Proxima Centauri experienced regular, although smaller, x-ray flares. "Over the billions of years since Proxima b formed, flares like this one could have evaporated any atmosphere or ocean and sterilized the surface, suggesting that habitability may involve more than just being the right distance from the host star to have liquid water."

-- submitted from IRC


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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by VLM on Wednesday February 28 2018, @03:11PM

    by VLM (445) on Wednesday February 28 2018, @03:11PM (#645171)

    They should study flares more, for SETI reasons. Somebody with a great pile of atomic bombs or whatever works might be trying to send morse code using a star.

    I would imagine its easier to control a star's worth of energy transmission, than it is to directly generate a stars worth of energy transmission. There are other analogies like tossing weird elements into a stars atmosphere to contaminate spectrograms in an unnatural manner. How about a cluster of drone orbiting satellites spraying carefully timed gas into the air to make a very temporary gas lens to focus stellar light in certain directions to screw with luminosity astronomy, creating the appearance of the worlds weirdest variable star magnitude diagram.

    Probably can't transmit many bits per second or bits per year this way, but it might be adequate as a beacon "point all yer antennae over here for more"

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