Effects of XUV radiation on circumbinary planets
J. Sanz-Forcada, S. Desidera, G. Micela

TL;DR
This study investigates how intense XUV radiation from active binary stars causes rapid atmospheric evaporation of close-in circumbinary planets, affecting their survival and orbital distribution.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of stellar radiation effects on circumbinary planet atmospheres, highlighting the significance of XUV radiation in atmospheric loss.
Findings
Close-in circumbinary planets experience strong photoevaporation.
Binary systems of solar-like stars can rapidly strip planetary atmospheres.
Observed orbital period distribution suggests photoevaporation influences planet placement.
Abstract
Several circumbinary planets have recently been discovered. The orbit of a planet around a binary stellar system poses several dynamic constraints. The effects that radiation from the host stars may have on the planet atmospheres must be considered. Because of the configuration of a close binary system, these stars have a high rotation rate, which causes a permanent state of high stellar activity and copious XUV radiation. The accumulated effects are stronger than for exoplanets around single stars, and cause a faster evaporation of their atmospheres. We evaluate the effects that stellar radiation has on the evaporation of exoplanets around binary systems and on the survival of these planets. We considered the XUV spectral range to account for the photons that are easily absorbed by a planet atmosphere that is mainly composed of hydrogen. A more complex atmospheric composition is…
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