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Exoplanet Aeronomy: A Case Study of WASP-69 b’s Variable Thermosphere

Authors :
W. Garrett Levine
Shreyas Vissapragada
Adina D. Feinstein
George W. King
Aleck Hernandez
Lía Corrales
Michael Greklek-McKeon
Heather A. Knutson
Source :
The Astronomical Journal, Vol 168, Iss 2, p 65 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
IOP Publishing, 2024.

Abstract

Aeronomy, the study of Earth’s upper atmosphere and its interaction with the local space environment, has long traced changes in the thermospheres of Earth and other solar system planets to solar variability in the X-ray and extreme-ultraviolet (collectively, XUV) bands. Extending comparative aeronomy to the short-period extrasolar planets may illuminate whether stellar XUV irradiation powers atmospheric outflows that change planetary radii on astronomical timescales. In recent years, near-IR transit spectroscopy of metastable He i has been a prolific tracer of high-altitude planetary gas. We present a case study of exoplanet aeronomy using metastable He i transit observations from Palomar Observatory's Wide Field InfraRed Camera and follow-up high-energy data from the Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory that were taken within 1 month of the WASP-69 system, a K-type main-sequence star with a well-studied hot Jupiter companion. Supplemented by archival data, we find that WASP-69's X-ray flux in 2023 was less than 50% of what was recorded in 2016 and that the metastable He i absorption from WASP-69 b was lower in 2023 versus past epochs from 2017 to 2019. Via atmospheric modeling, we show that this time-variable metastable He i signal is in the expected direction given the observed change in stellar XUV, possibly stemming from WASP-69's magnetic activity cycle. Our results underscore the ability of multiepoch, multiwavelength observations to paint a cohesive picture of the interaction between an exoplanet’s atmosphere and its host star.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15383881
Volume :
168
Issue :
2
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
The Astronomical Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.1d574615dd3248689cb40a5e5fba837b
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ad5354