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Radio Burst from a Stellar Coronal Mass Ejection

  • J. R. Callingham
  • , C. Tasse
  • , R. Keers
  • , R. D. Kavanagh
  • , H. Vedantham
  • , P. Zarka
  • , S. Bellotti
  • , P. I. Cristofari
  • , S. Bloot
  • , D. C. Konijn
  • , M. J. Hardcastle
  • , L. Lamy
  • , E. K. Pass
  • , B. J. S. Pope
  • , H. Reid
  • , H. J. A. Röttgering
  • , T. W. Shimwell
  • , P. Zucca

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Coronal mass ejections (CMEs) are massive expulsions of magnetized plasma from a star and are the largest contributors to space weather in the Solar System 1,2. CMEs play an important role in planetary atmospheric erosion, especially for planets that are close to their host star 3, 4–5. However, this conclusion remains controversial as there has not been an unambiguous detection of a CME from a star outside our Sun. Previous stellar CME studies have only inferred the presence of a CME through the detection of other types of stellar eruptive event 6, 7, 8–9. A signature of a fast CME is a type II radio burst 10,11, which is emitted from the shock wave produced as the CME travels through the stellar corona into interplanetary space. Here we report an analogue to a type II burst from the early M dwarf StKM 1-1262. The burst exhibits identical frequency, time and polarization properties to fundamental plasma emission from a solar type II burst. We demonstrate that the rate of these events with similar radio luminosity from M dwarfs is 0.84−0.69+1.94×10−3 per day per star. Our detection implies that we are no longer restricted to extrapolating the solar CME kinematics and rates to other stars, allowing us to establish observational limits on the impact of CMEs on exoplanets.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)603-607
Number of pages5
JournalNature
Volume647
Early online date12 Nov 2025
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 20 Nov 2025

Keywords

  • astro-ph.SR
  • astro-ph.EP

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