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Magnetism and Activity of the Sun and Stars
J. Arnaud and N. Meunier (eds)
EAS Publications Series, Vol. 9, 2003
DOI: 10.1051/eas:2003118
Young stellar flares and meteoritic isotopic anomalies
E.D. FeigelsonService d'Astrophysique, Centre d'Études de Saclay, France and Department of Astronomy & Astrophysics, Pennsylvania State University, USA
Abstract
A long-standing enigma in planetary science has been the presence of
daughter products of radioactive isotopes with short (
yr)
lifetimes. Some models are based on the injection of freshly
synthesized nuclides from stellar sources (e.g. a supernova remnant)
into the molecular cloud from which the solar system formed. Other
models produce these radionuclides within the disk via spallation by
high fluences of MeV baryons. We report here the first quantitative
measure of magnetic reconnection flaring in Myr-old analogs of the
early Sun from
Chandra X-ray Observatory observations of the Orion
Nebula Cluster. We show that virtually all analogs of the
1
Myr Sun exhibit X-ray flares that are ~30 times more powerful and
~300 times more frequent than the most powerful flares seen on
the contemporary Sun. We infer that the proton fluence of the early
Sun was
105 times that seen today, and argue that these protons may
plausibly have bombarded solids in the protoplanetary disk. Others
have demonstrated that such particle fluences are sufficient to produce
several of the most troublesome excesses of short-lived CAI isotopes
via spallation of normal nebular material. Our results thus strengthen
the astronomical foundation for local irradiation models of meteoritic
short-lived isotopic anomalies. This work is described in detail by
Feigelson et al. (2002b).
© EAS, EDP Sciences 2003
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