2022AJ....164..234V


Query : 2022AJ....164..234V

2022AJ....164..234V - Astron. J., 164, 234 (2022/December-0)

The Upper Edge of the Neptune Desert Is Stable Against Photoevaporation.

VISSAPRAGADA S., KNUTSON H.A., GREKLEK-MCKEON M., OKLOPCIC A., DAI F., DOS SANTOS L.A., JOVANOVIC N., MAWET D., MILLAR-BLANCHAER M.A., PARAGAS K., SPAKE J.J., TINYANONT S. and VASISHT G.

Abstract (from CDS):

Transit surveys indicate that there is a deficit of Neptune-sized planets on close-in orbits. If this “Neptune desert” is entirely cleared out by atmospheric mass loss, then planets at its upper edge should only be marginally stable against photoevaporation, exhibiting strong outflow signatures in tracers like the metastable helium triplet. We test this hypothesis by carrying out a 12-night photometric survey of the metastable helium feature with Palomar/WIRC, targeting seven gas-giant planets orbiting K-type host stars. Eight nights of data are analyzed here for the first time along with reanalyses of four previously published data sets. We strongly detect helium absorption signals for WASP-69b, HAT-P-18b, and HAT-P-26b; tentatively detect signals for WASP-52b and NGTS-5b; and do not detect signals for WASP-177b and WASP-80b. We interpret these measured excess absorption signals using grids of Parker wind models to derive mass-loss rates, which are in good agreement with predictions from the hydrodynamical outflow code ATES for all planets except WASP-52b and WASP-80b, where our data suggest that the outflows are much smaller than predicted. Excluding these two planets, the outflows for the rest of the sample are consistent with a mean energy-limited outflow efficiency of $\varepsilon ={0.41}_{-0.13}^{+0.16}$. Even when we make the relatively conservative assumption that gas-giant planets experience energy-limited outflows at this efficiency for their entire lives, photoevaporation would still be too inefficient to carve the upper boundary of the Neptune desert. We conclude that this feature of the exoplanet population is a pristine tracer of giant planet formation and migration mechanisms.

Abstract Copyright: © 2022. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society.

Journal keyword(s): Exoplanet astronomy - Exoplanets - Exoplanet evolution - Exoplanet atmospheres - Planetary atmospheres

Simbad objects: 33

goto Full paper

goto View the references in ADS

Number of rows : 33
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 BD+01 316b Pl 01 46 31.8575937456 +02 42 02.030065560           ~ 205 0
2 TOI-849b Pl 01 54 51.7040408544 -29 25 18.468394788           ~ 41 0
3 HAT-P-32b Pl 02 04 10.2774374568 +46 41 16.212315084           ~ 156 1
4 * eps Eri BY* 03 32 55.8444911587 -09 27 29.739493865 5.19 4.61 3.73 3.00 2.54 K2V 1932 1
5 NAME V1298 Tau d Pl 04 05 19.5909996648 +20 09 25.563233736           ~ 22 0
6 HD 40307 PM* 05 54 04.2405000288 -60 01 24.493007640 8.814 8.097 7.147 6.597 6.119 K2.5V 263 1
7 NAME LP 424-4b Pl 07 59 05.8395356736 +15 23 29.236065000           ~ 301 1
8 HD 73583b Pl 08 38 45.2603894280 -13 15 24.092462772           ~ 30 0
9 HD 85512 PM* 09 51 07.0518026760 -43 30 10.023686079 9.963 8.83 7.651 6.934 6.319 K6Vk: 213 1
10 HD 93396b Pl 10 46 49.7401839144 -09 23 56.495447700           ~ 54 0
11 K2-235b Pl 12 33 32.8441110816 -10 08 46.225572324           ~ 170 0
12 HAT-P-12b Pl 13 57 33.4668726399 +43 29 36.601508739           ~ 176 1
13 HAT-P-26 PM* 14 12 37.5331103311 +04 03 36.116569918   12.33 11.76 11.56   K1 61 1
14 HAT-P-26b Pl 14 12 37.5331103311 +04 03 36.116569918           ~ 162 1
15 NGTS-5b Pl 14 44 13.9703941656 +05 36 19.415892780           ~ 11 0
16 NGTS-5 * 14 44 13.9703941656 +05 36 19.415892780   14.71 13.77 13.60   K2V 5 0
17 HAT-P-18b Pl 17 05 23.1475097496 +33 00 44.940001716           ~ 118 1
18 HAT-P-18 * 17 05 23.1475097496 +33 00 44.940001716   11.9   12.61   K2V 55 1
19 NAME G 139-21b Pl 17 15 18.9339850845 +04 57 50.066612336           ~ 720 1
20 * 70 Oph ** 18 05 27.28518 +02 30 00.3558 5.40 4.89 4.03 3.38 2.92 K0-V 649 0
21 BD+47 2936 EB* 19 50 50.2472976936 +48 04 51.101390496       8.8   K4V 300 2
22 BD+47 2936b Pl 19 50 50.2472976936 +48 04 51.101390496           ~ 416 1
23 HD 189733b Pl 20 00 43.7129433648 +22 42 39.073143456           ~ 1436 1
24 WASP-80 PM* 20 12 40.1693365800 -02 08 39.187438476   12.810 11.939 11.510 10.279 K7V-M0V 70 1
25 WASP-80b Pl 20 12 40.1693365800 -02 08 39.187438476           ~ 120 1
26 BD-05 5432b Pl 21 00 06.1968214728 -05 05 40.034944176           ~ 144 1
27 BD-05 5432 PM* 21 00 06.1968214728 -05 05 40.034944176   10.93 9.87     ~ 68 1
28 HD 209458b Pl 22 03 10.7727465312 +18 53 03.549393384           ~ 1859 1
29 WASP-177b Pl 22 19 11.3371412688 -01 50 03.073407972           ~ 12 0
30 WASP-177 PM* 22 19 11.3371412688 -01 50 03.073407972   13.30 12.46 12.13   ~ 6 0
31 WASP-52b Pl 23 13 58.7576098848 +08 45 40.572305352           ~ 114 1
32 WASP-52 * 23 13 58.7576098848 +08 45 40.572305352   12.9 12.0 12.03   K2V 84 1
33 CD-38 15670b Pl 23 54 40.2073116552 -37 37 40.524416508           ~ 46 0

To bookmark this query, right click on this link: simbad:objects in 2022AJ....164..234V and select 'bookmark this link' or equivalent in the popup menu