Aeronomical constraints to the minimum mass and maximum radius of hot low-mass planets
L. Fossati, N. V. Erkaev, H. Lammer, P. E. Cubillos, P. Odert, I., Juvan, K. G. Kislyakova, M. Lendl, D. Kubyshkina, S. J. Bauer

TL;DR
This paper extends the Jeans escape parameter to include hydrodynamic and Roche lobe effects, establishing constraints on the minimum mass and maximum radius of hot low-mass planets based on atmospheric escape regimes.
Contribution
It introduces a generalized escape parameter $\Lambda$ that accounts for hydrodynamic and Roche lobe effects, providing new criteria to assess atmospheric escape and planetary stability.
Findings
Planets with $\Lambda$ < 15-35 are in the boil-off regime with high atmospheric escape.
Hot low-mass planets with $\Lambda$ < 15-35 tend to shrink to higher $\Lambda$ values within 500 Myr.
Constraints on $\Lambda$ can inform minimum planetary mass and maximum radius estimates.
Abstract
Stimulated by the discovery of a number of close-in low-density planets, we generalise the Jeans escape parameter taking hydrodynamic and Roche lobe effects into account. We furthermore define as the value of the Jeans escape parameter calculated at the observed planetary radius and mass for the planet's equilibrium temperature and considering atomic hydrogen, independently of the atmospheric temperature profile. We consider 5 and 10 planets with an equilibrium temperature of 500 and 1000 K, orbiting early G-, K-, and M-type stars. Assuming a clear atmosphere and by comparing escape rates obtained from the energy-limited formula, which only accounts for the heating induced by the absorption of the high-energy stellar radiation, and from a hydrodynamic atmosphere code, which also accounts for the bolometric heating, we find that planets whose is smaller…
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