ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Aims: We aim at constraining the conditions of the wind and high-energy emission of the host star reproducing the non-detection of Ly$alpha$ planetary absorption. Methods: We model the escaping planetary atmosphere, the stellar wind, and their interaction employing a multi-fluid, three-dimensional hydrodynamic code. We assume a planetary atmosphere composed of hydrogen and helium. We run models varying the stellar high-energy emission and stellar mass-loss rate, further computing for each case the Ly$alpha$ synthetic planetary atmospheric absorption and comparing it with the observations. Results: We find that a non-detection of Ly$alpha$ in absorption employing the stellar high-energy emission estimated from far-ultraviolet and X-ray data requires a stellar wind with a stellar mass-loss rate about six times lower than solar. This result is a consequence of the fact that, for $pi$ Men c, detectable Ly$alpha$ absorption can be caused exclusively by energetic neutral atoms, which become more abundant with increasing the velocity and/or the density of the stellar wind. By considering, instead, that the star has a solar-like wind, the non-detection requires a stellar ionising radiation about four times higher than estimated. This is because, despite the fact that a stronger stellar high-energy emission ionises hydrogen more rapidly, it also increases the upper atmosphere heating and expansion, pushing the interaction region with the stellar wind farther away from the planet, where the planet atmospheric density that remains neutral becomes smaller and the production of energetic neutral atoms less efficient. Conclusions: Comparing the results of our grid of models with what is expected and estimated for the stellar wind and high-energy emission, respectively, we support the idea that the atmosphere of $pi$ Men c is likely not hydrogen-dominated.
Using a global 3D, fully self-consistent, multi-fluid hydrodynamic model, we simulate the escaping upper atmosphere of the warm Neptune GJ436b, driven by the stellar XUV radiation impact and gravitational forces and interacting with the stellar wind.
Strongly irradiated exoplanets develop extended atmospheres that can be utilized to probe the deeper planet layers. This connection is particularly useful in the study of small exoplanets, whose bulk atmospheres are challenging to characterize direct
We use 3D hydrodynamics simulations followed by synthetic line profile calculations to examine the effect increasing the strength of the stellar wind has on observed Ly-$alpha$ transits of a Hot Jupiter (HJ) and a Warm Neptune (WN). We find that incr
The bright star $pi$ Men was chosen as the first target for a radial velocity follow-up to test the performance of ESPRESSO, the new high-resolution spectrograph at the ESOs Very-Large Telescope (VLT). The star hosts a multi-planet system (a transiti
Strong atmospheric escape has been detected in several close-in exoplanets. As these planets consist mostly of hydrogen, observations in hydrogen lines, such as Ly-alpha and H-alpha, are powerful diagnostics of escape. Here, we simulate the evolution