The long egress of GJ~436b's giant exosphere
B. Lavie, D. Ehrenreich, V. Bourrier, A. Lecavelier des Etangs, A., Vidal-Madjar, X. Delfosse, A. Gracia Berna, K. Heng, N. Thomas, S. Udry, P.J., Wheatley

TL;DR
This study uses Hubble Space Telescope observations to analyze the extended hydrogen exosphere of GJ 436b, confirming its long tail and exploring interactions with stellar wind and magnetic fields.
Contribution
It provides new Ly{ extalpha} data combined with archival observations, confirming the exosphere's tail lasts 10-25 hours and aligns with 3D simulation predictions.
Findings
Exosphere tail persists 10-25 hours after transit.
Hydrogen atoms in the tail occult the star for extended periods.
Detected flux decreases in Ly{ extalpha} and Si iii lines during transit.
Abstract
The M dwarf GJ 436 hosts a transiting warm Neptune known to experience atmospheric escape. Previous observations revealed the presence of a giant hydrogen exosphere transiting the star for more than 5 h, and absorbing up to 56% of the flux in the blue wing of the stellar Lyman-{\alpha} line of neutral hydrogen (H i Ly{\alpha}). The unexpected size of this comet-like exosphere prevented observing the full transit of its tail. In this Letter, we present new Ly{\alpha} observations of GJ 436 obtained with the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) instrument onboard the Hubble Space Telescope. The stability of the Ly{\alpha} line over six years allowed us to combine these new observations with archival data sets, substantially expanding the coverage of the exospheric transit. Hydrogen atoms in the tail of the exospheric cloud keep occulting the star for 10-25 h after the transit of…
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