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The Variable Detection of Atmospheric Escape around the Young, Hot Neptune AU Mic bPhotoevaporation is a potential explanation for several features within exoplanet demographics. Atmospheric escape observed in young Neptune-sized exoplanets can provide insight into and characterize which mechanisms drive this evolution and at what times they dominate. AU Mic b is one such exoplanet, slightly larger than Neptune (4.19 R). It closely orbits a 23 Myr pre-main-sequence M dwarf with an orbital period of 8.46 days. We obtained two visits of AU Mic b at Lyα with Hubble Space Telescope (HST)/Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph. One flare within the
first HST visit is characterized and removed from our search for a planetary transit. We present a nondetection in our first visit, followed by the detection of escaping neutral hydrogen ahead of the planet in our second visit. The outflow absorbed ∼30% of the star’s Lyα blue wing 2.5 hr before the planet’s white-light transit. We estimate that the highest-velocity escaping material has a column density of 1013.96 cm−2 and is moving 61.26 km s−1 away from the host star. AU Mic b’s large high-energy irradiation could photoionize its escaping neutral hydrogen in 44 minutes, rendering it temporarily unobservable. Our time-variable Lyα transit ahead of AU Mic b could also be explained by an intermediate stellar wind strength from AU Mic that shapes the escaping material into a leading tail. Future Lyα observations of this system will confirm and characterize the unique variable nature of its Lyα transit, which, combined with modeling, will tune the importance of stellar wind and photoionization.
Document ID
20230011142
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Keighley E Rockcliffe ORCID
(Dartmouth College Hanover, New Hampshire, United States)
Elisabeth R Newton ORCID
(Dartmouth College Hanover, New Hampshire, United States)
Allison Youngblood ORCID
(Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, Maryland, United States)
Girish M Duvvuri ORCID
(University of Colorado Boulder Boulder, Colorado, United States)
Peter Plavchan ORCID
(George Mason University Fairfax, Virginia, United States)
Peter Gao ORCID
(Carnegie Institution for Science Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States)
Andrew W Mann ORCID
(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States)
Patrick J Lowrance ORCID
(California Institute of Technology Pasadena, California, United States)
Date Acquired
July 31, 2023
Publication Date
July 27, 2023
Publication Information
Publication: Astronomical Journal
Publisher: IOP Publishing
Volume: 166
Issue: 2
Issue Publication Date: August 1, 2023
ISSN: 0004-6256
e-ISSN: 1538-3881
Subject Category
Solar Physics
Astronomy
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 315404.07.02.30.01.01
CONTRACT_GRANT: J-090007
CONTRACT_GRANT: J-090005
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Portions of document may include copyright protected material.
Technical Review
External Peer Committee
Keywords
Exoplanets
Hot Neptunes
Exoplanet atmospheric variability
Exoplanet stmospheric dynamics
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