Hint of 150 MHz radio emission from the Neptune-mass extrasolar transiting planet HAT-P-11b
A. Lecavelier des Etangs, S.K. Sirothia, Gopal-Krishna, P. Zarka

TL;DR
This study reports a tentative detection of 150 MHz radio emission from the Neptune-mass exoplanet HAT-P-11b, suggesting possible planetary radio activity, but the signal was not confirmed in subsequent observations, requiring further study.
Contribution
First deep radio observation at 150 MHz of HAT-P-11b, indicating a potential planetary radio emission signal with a possible eclipse signature.
Findings
Detected a 3-sigma radio emission consistent with an eclipse
Repeat observations did not confirm the initial signal
Possible variable planetary radio emission or false positive
Abstract
Since the radio-frequency emission from planets is expected to be strongly influenced by their interaction with the magnetic field and corona of the host star, the physics of this process can be effectively constrained by making sensitive measurements of the planetary radio emission. Up to now, however, numerous searches for radio emission from extrasolar planets at radio wavelengths have only yielded negative results. Here we report deep radio observations of the nearby Neptune-mass extrasolar transiting planet HAT-P-11b at 150 MHz, using the Giant Meterwave Radio Telescope (GMRT). On July 16, 2009, we detected a 3-sigma emission whose light curve is consistent with an eclipse when the planet passed behind the star. This emission is at a position 14 arcsec from the transiting exoplanet's coordinates; thus, with a synthetized beam of FWHM~16 arcsec, the position uncertainty of this weak…
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