On the existence of energetic atoms in the upper atmosphere of exoplanet HD209458b
Lotfi Ben-Jaffel, Sona Hosseini

TL;DR
This study analyzes far-ultraviolet spectra of exoplanet HD209458b to investigate energetic atoms in its upper atmosphere, revealing significant non-thermal heating of oxygen and carbon ions, and proposing a hot hydrogen population with high temperature and low velocity.
Contribution
It introduces non-thermal line broadening in atmospheric models to explain observed transit absorption features, highlighting energetic processes affecting exoplanet upper atmospheres.
Findings
Oxygen and CII are significantly heated with effective temperatures much higher than background gas.
A hot hydrogen atom population with temperatures around 10^6 K is likely present.
Models require substantial line broadening to fit observed spectral features.
Abstract
Stellar irradiation and particles forcing strongly affect the immediate environment of extrasolar giant planets orbiting near their parent stars. Here, we use far-ultraviolet emission spectra from HD209458 in the wavelength range (1180-1710)A to bring new insight to the composition and energetic processes in play in the gas nebula around the transiting planetary companion. In that frame, we consider up-to-date atmospheric models of the giant exoplanet where we implement non-thermal line broadening to simulate the impact on the transit absorption of superthermal atoms (HI, OI, and CII) populating the upper layers of the nebula. Our sensitivity study shows that for all existing models, a significant line broadening is required for OI and probably for CII lines in order to fit the observed transit absorptions. In that frame, we show that OI and CII are preferentially heated compared to the…
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