AZ Cancri
AZ Cancri is a M-type flare star in the constellation Cancer. It has an apparent visual magnitude of approximately 17.59.
Observations
AZ Cancri is a member of the Beehive Cluster, also known as Praesepe or NGC 2632. The spectral type of AZ Cnc is M6e, specifically M6.5Ve, and was catalogued as a flare star by Haro and Chavira in 1964. AZ Cnc has also been found to be an x-ray source, with the ROSAT designations of RX J0840.4+1824 and 1RXS J084029.9+182417. The X-ray luminosity has been found to be 27.40 ergs/sPhysical characteristics
The absolute magnitude of the star has been found to be 16.9, and thus its luminosity is approximately 3.020 x 1030 ergs/s.AZ Cancri is located approximately from the Sun, and is considered a very low-mass star with a radial velocity of 64.2±0.6 km/s. AZ Cancri belongs kinematically to the old disk. It is rotating at approximately 7.9±2.8 km/s.
Flaring
The X-ray luminosity of AZ Cnc increased by at least two orders of magnitude during a flare that lasted more than 3 hours and reached a peak emission level of more than 1029 ergs/s. During another long duration flare on AZ Cnc, very strong wing asymmetries occurred in all lines of the Balmer series and all strong He I lines, but not in the metal lines.The flaring atmosphere of AZ Cancri has been analysed with a stellar atmosphere model, and was found to consist of
- an underlying photosphere,
- a linear temperature rise vs. log column mass in the chromosphere, and
- transition region with different gradients.
The line asymmetries have been attributed to downward moving material, specifically a series of flare-triggered downward moving chromospheric condensations, or chromospheric downward condensations s as on the Sun.
Theory of coronal heating
The electrodynamic coupling theory of coronal heating developed in a solar context, has been applied to stellar corona. A distinctive feature is the occurrence of a resonance between the convective turnover time and the crossing time for Alfvén waves in a coronal loop. The resonance attains a maximum among the early M dwarf spectral types and declines thereafter. A turnover in coronal heating efficiency, presumably manifested by a decrease in Lx/Lbol, becomes evident toward the late M spectral types when the theory is applicable. This is consistent with an apparent lack of X-ray emission among the late M dwarfs. Coronal heating efficiencies do not decrease toward the presumably totally convective stars near the end of the main sequence. For "saturated" M dwarfs, 0.1% of all energy is typically radiated in X-rays, while for AZ Cnc this number increases during flaring to 7%. So far there is no evidence to suggest that AZ Cnc is less efficient than more massive dwarfs in creating a corona. The saturation boundary in X-ray luminosity extends to late M dwarfs, with Lx/Lbol ~ 10−3 for saturated dwarfs outside flaring. No coronal dividing line exists in the Hertzsprung–Russell diagram at the low-mass end of the main sequence.AZ Cnc casts doubt on the applicability of electrodynamic coupling as there is no evidence for a sharp drop in Lx/Lbol when compared with other late M stars at least until subtype M8.