Abstract

ABSTRACT Energetic particles, such as stellar cosmic rays, produced at a heightened rate by active stars (like the young Sun) may have been important for the origin of life on Earth and other exoplanets. Here, we compare, as a function of stellar rotation rate (Ω), contributions from two distinct populations of energetic particles: stellar cosmic rays accelerated by impulsive flare events and Galactic cosmic rays. We use a 1.5D stellar wind model combined with a spatially 1D cosmic ray transport model. We formulate the evolution of the stellar cosmic ray spectrum as a function of stellar rotation. The maximum stellar cosmic ray energy increases with increasing rotation, i.e. towards more active/younger stars. We find that stellar cosmic rays dominate over Galactic cosmic rays in the habitable zone at the pion threshold energy for all stellar ages considered ($t_*=0.6\!-\!2.9\,$ Gyr). However, even at the youngest age, $t_*=0.6\,$ Gyr, we estimate that $\gtrsim \, 80$ MeV stellar cosmic ray fluxes may still be transient in time. At ∼1 Gyr when life is thought to have emerged on Earth, we demonstrate that stellar cosmic rays dominate over Galactic cosmic rays up to ∼4 GeV energies during flare events. Our results for t* = 0.6 Gyr (Ω = 4 Ω⊙) indicate that ≲GeV stellar cosmic rays are advected from the star to 1 au and are impacted by adiabatic losses in this region. The properties of the inner solar wind, currently being investigated by the Parker Solar Probe and Solar Orbiter, are thus important for accurate calculations of stellar cosmic rays around young Sun-like stars.

Highlights

  • There is much interest in determining the conditions, such as the sources of ionisation for exoplanetary atmospheres, that were present in the early solar system when life is thought to have begun on Earth

  • Our aim is to determine the range of stellar rotation rates for which the differential intensity of stellar cosmic rays dominates over Galactic cosmic rays at energies above the pion threshold energy

  • In this paper we have investigated the differential intensity of stellar cosmic rays that reach the habitable zone of a solartype star as a function of stellar rotation rate

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Summary

Introduction

There is much interest in determining the conditions, such as the sources of ionisation for exoplanetary atmospheres, that were present in the early solar system when life is thought to have begun on Earth (at a stellar age of ∼1 Gyr, Mojzsis et al 1996). This allows us to postulate what the important factors that led to life here on Earth were. Similar to what has been estimated to occur for Galactic cosmic rays, the changing physical condi-

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