Mass-loss rates for transiting exoplanets
David Ehrenreich, Jean-Michel D\'esert

TL;DR
This paper quantifies atmospheric mass-loss rates, heating efficiencies, and lifetimes for transiting exoplanets using an energy diagram approach, highlighting the potential for complete evaporation of some hot exoplanets within 1 Gyr.
Contribution
It introduces a method to estimate mass-loss rates and heating efficiencies for all known transiting exoplanets, including hot Jupiters, Neptunes, and super-Earths, based on stellar X/EUV energy input.
Findings
Mass-loss rates range from 10^6 to 10^13 g/s.
Hot Jupiters like WASP-12b could evaporate within 1 Gyr.
Heating efficiency eta can be constrained from observations.
Abstract
Exoplanets at small orbital distances from their host stars are submitted to intense levels of energetic radiations, X-rays and extreme ultraviolet (EUV). Depending on the masses and densities of the planets and on the atmospheric heating efficiencies, the stellar energetic inputs can lead to atmospheric mass loss. These evaporation processes are observable in the ultraviolet during planetary transits. The aim of the present work is to quantify the mass-loss rates (dm/dt), heating efficiencies (eta), and lifetimes for the whole sample of transiting exoplanets, now including hot jupiters, hot neptunes, and hot super-earths. The mass-loss rates and lifetimes are estimated from an "energy diagram" for exoplanets, which compares the planet gravitational potential energy to the stellar X/EUV energy deposited in the atmosphere. We estimate the mass-loss rates of all detected transiting…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
