4.7 Article

Radio observations of a large sample of late M, L, and T dwarfs: The distribution of magnetic field strengths

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 648, Issue 1, Pages 629-636

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/505787

Keywords

radio continuum : stars; stars : activity; stars : low-mass, brown dwarfs; stars : magnetic fields

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I present radio observations of 90 dwarf stars and brown dwarfs of spectral type M5-T8. Three sources exhibit radio activity, in addition to the six objects previously detected in quiescence and outburst, leading to an overall detection rate of similar to 10% for objects later than M7. The inferred magnetic field strengths are similar to 10(2) G in quiescence and nearly 1 kG during flares, while the majority of the nondetected objects have B less than or similar to 50 G. Depending on the configuration and size of the magnetic loops, the surface fields may approach 1 kG even in quiescence, at most a factor of a few smaller than in early M dwarfs. With the larger sample of sources I find continued evidence for (1) a sharp transition around spectral type of M7 from a ratio of radio to X-ray luminosity of log (L-R/L-X) similar to -15.5 to greater than or similar to -12, (2) increased radio activity (L-R/L-bo1) with later spectral type, in contrast to H alpha and X-ray observations, and (3) an overall drop in the fraction of active sources from similar to 30% for M dwarfs to similar to 5% for L dwarfs, consistent with H alpha and X-ray observations. Taken together, these trends suggest that some late M and L dwarfs are capable of generating 0.1-1 kG magnetic fields, but the overall drop in the fraction of such objects likely reflects changes in the structure of the chromospheres and coronae, possibly due to increasingly neutral atmospheres and/or a transition to a turbulent dynamo. These possibilities can best be tested through simultaneous observations, which can trace the effect of magnetic dissipation in a direct, rather than a statistical, manner. Still, a more extended radio survey currently holds the best promise for measuring the magnetic field properties of a large number of dwarf stars.

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