The Variability of Radio Stars

Abstract

Stellar radio emission is highly variable with stellar flares lasting from milliseconds to hours. For some stars, their flares or bursts can repeat once every couple of hours, while other stars may flare only once in hundreds of hours of observing. Some stars and stellar systems vary slowly over months to years. In this chapter we present the current methods for identifying radio stars and the important role that variability plays in these detection methods. We highlight that radio stars are the second most common radio variable object in image-plane searches for radio variable sources. We also present our predictions for the number of stars both the SKA-mid and SKA-low AA* arrays could detect based on searches using SKA pathfinders and precursors.

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