A High-Resolution Non-Detection of Escaping Helium In The Ultra-Hot Neptune LTT 9779b: Evidence for Weakened Evaporation
The recent discovery of ``ultra-hot'' ($P < 1$ day) Neptunes has come as a surprise: some of these planets have managed to retain gaseous envelopes despite being close enough to their host stars to trigger strong photoevaporation and/or Roche lobe overflow. Here, we investigate atmosphe...
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Zusammenfassung: | The recent discovery of ``ultra-hot'' ($P < 1$ day) Neptunes has come as a
surprise: some of these planets have managed to retain gaseous envelopes
despite being close enough to their host stars to trigger strong
photoevaporation and/or Roche lobe overflow. Here, we investigate atmospheric
escape in LTT 9779b, an ultra-hot Neptune with a volatile-rich envelope. We
observed two transits of this planet using the newly-commissioned WINERED
spectrograph ($R\sim68,000$) on the 6.5 m Clay/Magellan II Telescope, aiming to
detect an extended upper atmosphere in the He 10830 A triplet. We found no
detectable planetary absorption: in a 0.75 A passband centered on the triplet,
we set a 2$\sigma$ upper limit of 0.12% ($\delta R_p/H < 14$) and a 3$\sigma$
upper limit of 0.20% ($\delta R_p/H < 22$). Using a H/He isothermal Parker wind
model, we found corresponding 95% and 99.7% upper limits on the planetary
mass-loss rate of $\dot{M} < 10^{10.03}$ g s$^{-1}$ and $\dot{M} < 10^{11.11}$
g s$^{-1}$ respectively, smaller than predicted by outflow models even
considering the weak stellar XUV emission. The low evaporation rate is
plausibly explained by a metal-rich envelope, which would decrease the
atmospheric scale height and increase the cooling rate of the outflow. This
hypothesis is imminently testable: if metals commonly weaken planetary
outflows, then we expect that \textit{JWST} will find high atmospheric
metallicities for small planets that have evaded detection in He 10830 A. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2401.16474 |