Star-planet magnetic interaction and evaporation of planetary atmospheres
A. F. Lanza

TL;DR
This paper investigates how magnetic reconnection between stars and close-in planets can significantly enhance atmospheric mass loss, often surpassing EUV radiation effects, impacting planetary evolution and observational signatures.
Contribution
It introduces models quantifying energy transfer via magnetic reconnection and electron acceleration, revealing its importance in planetary atmosphere evaporation beyond EUV effects.
Findings
Magnetic reconnection can increase planetary mass loss rates by up to 50 times.
Energetic electrons reach deep atmospheric layers, comparable to EUV photon penetration.
Magnetic interactions can dominate atmospheric heating for close-in, massive exoplanets.
Abstract
Stars interact with their close-in planets through radiation, gravitation, and magnetic fields. We investigate the energy input to a planetary atmosphere by reconnection between stellar and planetary magnetic fields and compare it to the energy input of the extreme ultraviolet (EUV) radiation field of the star. We quantify the power released by magnetic reconnection at the boundary of the planetary magnetosphere that is conveyed to the atmosphere by accelerated electrons. We introduce simple models to evaluate the energy spectrum of the accelerated electrons and the energy dissipated in the atmospheric layers in the polar regions of the planet upon which they impinge. A simple transonic isothermal wind flow along field lines is considered to estimate the increase in mass loss rate in comparison with a planet irradiated only by the EUV flux of its host star. We find that energetic…
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