Colliding Planetary and Stellar Winds: Charge Exchange and Transit Spectroscopy in Neutral Hydrogen
Pascal Tremblin, Eugene Chiang

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamic simulations to demonstrate that charge exchange in colliding stellar and planetary winds explains the observed Lyman-alpha absorption during hot Jupiter transits, highlighting the role of wind interactions.
Contribution
The paper provides the first detailed hydrodynamic modeling showing charge exchange in stellar-planetary wind collisions accounts for Lyman-alpha transit observations in hot Jupiters.
Findings
Charge exchange produces sufficient neutral hydrogen to match observations.
Mixing layer forms quickly, within tens of seconds, during wind collision.
Simulations support wind interaction as key to transit absorption features.
Abstract
When transiting their host stars, hot Jupiters absorb about 10% of the light in the wings of the stellar Lyman-alpha emission line. The absorption occurs at wavelengths Doppler-shifted from line center by +/- 100 km/s - larger than the thermal speeds with which partially neutral, 10E4 K hydrogen escapes from hot Jupiter atmospheres. It has been proposed that the absorption arises from 10E6 K hydrogen from the host stellar wind, made momentarily neutral by charge exchange with planetary H I. The +/-100 km/s velocities would then be attributed to the typical velocity dispersions of protons in the stellar wind - as inferred from spacecraft measurements of the Solar wind. To test this proposal, we perform 2D hydrodynamic simulations of colliding hot Jupiter and stellar winds, augmented by a chemistry module to compute the amount of hot neutral hydrogen produced by charge exchange. The…
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