Investigating coronal saturation and super-saturation in fast-rotating M-dwarf stars

Abstract

At fast rotation rates the coronal activity of G- and K-type stars has been observed to "saturate" and then decline again at even faster rotation rates -- a phenomenon dubbed "super-saturation". In this paper we investigate coronal activity in fast-rotating M-dwarfs using deep XMM-Newton observations of 97 low-mass stars of known rotation period in the young open cluster NGC 2547, and combine these with published X-ray surveys of low-mass field and cluster stars of known rotation period. Like G- and K-dwarfs, we find that M-dwarfs exhibit increasing coronal activity with decreasing Rossby number NR, the ratio of period to convective turnover time, and that activity saturates at Lx/Lbol ~ 10-3 for log NR < -0.8. However, super-saturation is not convincingly displayed by M-dwarfs, despite the presence of many objects in our sample with log NR < -1.8, where super-saturation is observed to occur in higher mass stars. Instead, it appears that a short rotation period is the primary predictor of super-saturation; P <=0.3d for K-dwarfs and perhaps P <=0.2d for M-dwarfs. These observations favour the "centrifugal stripping" model for super-saturation, where coronal structures are forced open or become radiatively unstable as the Keplerian co-rotation radius moves inside the X-ray emitting coronal volume.

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