Far-UV Emissions of the Sun in Time: Probing Solar Magnetic Activity and Effects on Evolution of Paleo-Planetary Atmospheres
Citation:
Guinan, E.F., Ribas, I., & Harper, G.M., Far-UV Emissions of the Sun in Time: Probing Solar Magnetic Activity and Effects on Evolution of Paleo-Planetary Atmospheres, Astrophysical Journal, 594, 2003, 561-572Download Item:

Abstract:
We present and analyze Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE) observations of six solar analogs. These
are single, main-sequenceG0?5 stars selected as proxies for the Sun at several stages of its main-sequence lifetime
from ~130 Myr up to ~9 Gyr. The emission features in the FUSE 920?1180 A wavelength range allow for a
critical probe of the hot plasma over three decades in temperature: ~ 104 K for the H I Lyman series to ~ 6 ? 106
K for the coronal Fe XVIII 975 line. Using the flux ratio C III 1176/ 977 as diagnostics, we investigate the
dependence of the electron pressure of the transition region as a function of the rotation period, age and magnetic
activity. The results from these solar proxies indicate that the electron pressure of the stellar ~105-K plasma
decreases by a factor of ~70 between the young, fast-rotating (Prot = 2.7 d) magnetically active star and the
old, slow-rotating (Prot ~ 35 d) inactive star. Also, we study the variations in the total surface flux for specific
emission features that trace the hot gas in the stellar chromosphere (C II), transition region (C III, O VI), and
corona (Fe XVIII). The observations indicate that the average surface fluxes of the analyzed emission features
strongly decrease with increasing stellar age and longer rotation period. The emission flux evolution with age or
rotation period is well fitted by power laws, which become steeper from cooler chromospheric (~ 104 K) to hotter
coronal (~ 107 K) plasma. The relationship for the integrated (920?1180 A) FUSE flux indicates that the solar
far-ultraviolet (FUV) emissions were about twice the present value 2.5 Gyr ago and about 4 times the present
value 3.5 Gyr ago. Note also that the FUSE/FUV flux of the Zero-Age Main Sequence Sun could have been
higher by as much as 50 times. Our analysis suggests that the strong FUV emissions of the young Sun may have
played a crucial role in the developing planetary system, in particular through the photoionization, photochemical
evolution and possible erosion of the planetary atmospheres. Some examples of the effects of the early Sun?s
enhanced FUV irradiance on the atmospheres of Earth and Mars are also discussed.
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/harpergDescription:
PUBLISHED
Author: HARPER, GRAHAM
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American Astronomical SocietyType of material:
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Astrophysical Journal;594;
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