A grid of upper atmosphere models for 1--40 MEARTH planets: application to CoRoT-7 b and HD219134 b,c
Daria Kubyshkina, Luca Fossati, Nicolay V. Erkaev, Colin Johnstone,, Patricio Cubillos, Kristina Kislyakova, Helmut Lammer, Petra Odert

TL;DR
This study develops a comprehensive grid of hydrodynamic upper atmosphere models for 1-40 Earth-mass planets with hydrogen atmospheres, enabling improved predictions of atmospheric escape and evolution, applied to specific exoplanets CoRoT-7 b and HD219134 b,c.
Contribution
The paper introduces a large, detailed grid of atmospheric models for small exoplanets, with an interpolation routine for evolutionary studies, advancing beyond simple analytic escape formulas.
Findings
Models agree with previous studies on atmospheric escape.
Interpolation routine accurately predicts atmospheric parameters.
Application to specific exoplanets estimates their atmospheric evolution.
Abstract
There is growing observational and theoretical evidence suggesting that atmospheric escape is a key driver of planetary evolution. Commonly, planetary evolution models employ simple analytic formulae (e.g., energy limited escape) that are often inaccurate, and more detailed physical models of atmospheric loss usually only give snapshots of an atmosphere's structure and are difficult to use for evolutionary studies. To overcome this problem, we upgrade and employ an already existing upper atmosphere hydrodynamic code to produce a large grid of about 7000 models covering planets with masses 1 - 39 Earth mass with hydrogen-dominated atmospheres and orbiting late-type stars. The modeled planets have equilibrium temperatures ranging between 300 and 2000 K. For each considered stellar mass, we account for three different values of the high-energy stellar flux (i.e., low, moderate, and high…
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