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Coronal Mass  Ejection (CME) detected on another star

Why in News?

  • Astronomers, using the LOFAR (Low-Frequency Array) telescope network, have detected a coronal mass ejection (CME) on a star other than the Sun for the first time.
  • The CME originated from red dwarf StKM 1-1262, located ~133 light years away.
  • Published in Nature, the discovery marks a breakthrough in studying stellar space weather and exoplanet habitability.

Relevance:

GS 3 – Science & Tech

  • Space weather, exoplanet habitability, stellar magnetic activity.
  • Significance of LOFAR radio network, astronomy breakthroughs.
  • Impact of CMEs on atmospheres, satellites, communication systems.

What Is a Coronal Mass Ejection (CME)?

  • Massive bursts of plasma and magnetic fields ejected from a star’s corona.
  • On the Sun:
    • Can disrupt satellites, GPS, radio communications.
    • Trigger auroras; recent Nov 12 auroras reached as far south as Tennessee and New Zealand.
  • Traditionally observed only on the Sun due to difficulty detecting faint radio signatures from distant stars.

The Breakthrough Discovery

  • LOFAR has been continuously collecting low-frequency radio data since 2016.
  • While originally built to study black holes and other high-energy cosmic phenomena, its wide field of view also captures background stars.
  • Researchers reprocessed archived data and detected a one-minute-long explosive burst from 2016.
  • Confirmed to be a CME — the first-ever radio detection of such an event on a non-Sun star.
  • The CME was 10,000 times more powerful than typical solar CMEs.

About the Host Star: StKM 1-1262

  • red dwarf star, mass 10–50% of the Sun.
  • Most common host star type for Earth-sized exoplanets in the galaxy.
  • Known for high magnetic activity and violent stellar flares.

Scientific Significance

Breakthrough for Stellar Space Weather

  • Opens the field of extra-solar space weather—understanding how other stars affect their planetary systems.
  • Allows study of stellar magnetic activity through continuous radio monitoring.

New Methodology

  • Demonstrates that archival low-frequency radio data can detect extreme stellar events.
  • Provides a new tool to study stellar magnetic cycles similar to the Sun’s 11-year cycle.

Implications for Planetary Habitability

Atmospheric Erosion

  • Red dwarf CMEs can strip atmospheres of planets in close orbits (common around red dwarfs).
  • Without an atmosphere, planets lose:
    • Surface water stability
    • UV protection
    • Climate stability
  • Such CMEs severely weaken chances for life near red dwarfs.

Reassessing Exoplanet Habitability Models

  • Many “habitable zone” planets (e.g., TRAPPIST-1 system) orbit red dwarfs.
  • New evidence suggests:
    • High stellar activity may make these environments far less habitable than earlier believed.
    • Need for stronger planetary magnetic fields to retain atmospheres.

Astronomy & Astrophysics Relevance

  • First direct confirmation that stellar CMEs occur beyond the Sun.
  • Helps refine models of:
    • Star–planet interactions
    • Atmospheric retention
    • Magnetic shielding
    • Evolution of exoplanetary climates

Why This Matters for the Future of Exoplanet Research

  • Radio detection is scalable → enables studying thousands of nearby stars.
  • Helps prioritise exoplanets with stable stellar environments for biosignature searches.
  • Supports missions like JWST, PLATO, ARIEL that study exoplanet atmospheres.

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