Multi-epoch sampling of the radio star population with the Australian SKA Pathfinder

Abstract

The population of radio-loud stars has to date been studied primarily through either targeted observations of a small number of highly active stars or widefield, single-epoch surveys that cannot easily distinguish stellar emission from background extra-Galactic sources. As a result it has been difficult to constrain population statistics such as the surface density and fraction of the population producing radio emission in a particular variable or spectral class. In this paper we present a sample of 36 radio stars detected in a circular polarisation search of the multi-epoch Variables and Slow Transients (VAST) pilot survey with ASKAP at 887.5~MHz. Through repeat sampling of the VAST pilot survey footprint we find an upper limit to the duty cycle of M-dwarf radio bursts of 8.5 per cent, and that at least 10 3 per cent of the population should produce radio bursts more luminous than 1015 erg s-1 Hz-1. We infer a lower limit on the long-term surface density of such bursts in a shallow 1.25 mJy PSF-1 sensitivity survey of 9+11-7 × 10-3 deg-2 and an instantaneous radio star surface density of 1.7 0.2 × 10-3 deg-2 on 12 min timescales. Based on these rates we anticipate 200 50 new radio star detections per year over the full VAST survey and 41\,000+10\,000-9\,000 in next-generation all-sky surveys with the Square Kilometre Array.

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