Exoplanets & Exomoons

Heating of the Atmospheres of Short-orbit Exoplanets by Their Rapid Orbital Motion through an Extreme Space Environment

By Keith Cowing
Status Report
The Astrophysical Journal
February 22, 2024
Filed under , , , , ,
Heating of the Atmospheres of Short-orbit Exoplanets by Their Rapid Orbital Motion through an Extreme Space Environment
Equatorial slices showing the solar/stellar wind solution for Trappist-1e (left column) and for solar Carrington Rotation 1916 (right column). Color contours are of magnetic field strength (top) and number density (bottom). Also shown is the orbit of Trappist-1e at 0.028 au and the hypothetical orbits at 0.05 and 0.1 au as solid black circles. Selected magnetic field lines are shown in gray. — The Astrophysical Journal

Exoplanets with short orbit periods reside very close to their host stars. They transition very rapidly between different sectors of the circumstellar space environment along their orbit, leading to large variations of the magnetic field in the vicinity of the planet on short timescales.

This rapid change of the magnetic flux through the conducting and resistive layer of the planetary upper atmosphere may drive currents that dissipate in the form of Joule heating (JH). Here, we estimate the amount of JH dissipation in the upper atmosphere of Trappist-1e, and two hypothetical planets orbiting the Sun in close-in orbits.

We find that the rapid orbital motion could drive a significant amount of atmospheric heating and could significantly affect the planetary atmosphere escape rate. Thus, the process should be accounted for when studying the long-term evolution of exoplanetary atmospheres.

Heating of the Atmospheres of Short-orbit Exoplanets by Their Rapid Orbital Motion through an Extreme Space Environment, The Astrophysical Journal (open access)

Astrobiology

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