Investigation of the environment around close-in transiting exoplanets using CLOUDY
Jake D. Turner, Duncan Christie, Phil Arras, Robert E. Johnson, Carl, Schmidt

TL;DR
This study models the absorption properties of gas around close-in transiting exoplanets using CLOUDY, concluding that stellar wind gas cannot explain observed UV transit depths, which are likely due to planetary atoms.
Contribution
It applies CLOUDY simulations to assess the opacity of stellar wind and planetary atmospheres, providing new insights into the origins of UV transit signals in exoplanets.
Findings
Stellar wind gas is too ionized to cause observed UV transits.
Planetary atoms are the likely source of UV transit depths.
Certain opacity sources in planetary atmospheres are predicted but not yet observed.
Abstract
It has been suggested that hot stellar wind gas in a bow shock around an exoplanet is sufficiently opaque to absorb stellar photons and give rise to an observable transit depth at optical and UV wavelengths. In the first part of this paper, we use the CLOUDY plasma simulation code to model the absorption from X-ray to radio wavelengths by 1-D slabs of gas in coronal equilibrium with varying densities () and temperatures () illuminated by a solar spectrum. For slabs at coronal temperatures () and densities even orders of magnitude larger than expected for the compressed stellar wind (), we find optical depths orders of magnitude too small () to explain the UV transit depths seen with Hubble. Using this result and our modeling of slabs with lower…
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