Abstract
We present first results from five XMM-Newton observations of the binary system α Centauri, which has been observed in snapshot like exposures of roughly two hours each during the last two years. In all our observations the X-ray emission of the system is dominated by α Cen B, a K1 star. The derived light curves of the individual components reveal variability on short timescales and a flare was discovered on α Cen B during one observation. A PSF fitting algorithm is applied to the event distribution to determine the brightness of each component during the observations. We perform a spectral analysis with multi-temperature models to calculate the X-ray luminosities. We investigate long term variability and possible activity cycles of both stars and find the optically brighter component α Cen A, a G2 star very similar to our Sun, to have fainted in X-rays by at least an order of magnitude during the observation program, a behaviour never observed before on α Cen A, but rather similar to the X-ray behaviour observed with XMM-Newton on HD 81809. We also compare our data with earlier spatially resolved observations performed over the last 25 years. © ESO 2005.
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Robrade, J., Schmitt, J. H. M. M., & Favata, F. (2005). X-rays from α Centauri - The darkening of the solar twin. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 442(1), 315–321. https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361:20053314
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