The Kepler-11 system: evolution of the stellar high-energy emission and {initial planetary} atmospheric mass fractions
D. Kubyshkina, L. Fossati, A. J. Mustill, P. E. Cubillos, M. B., Davies, N. V. Erkaev, C. P. Johnstone, K. G. Kislyakova, H. Lammer, M. Lendl,, P. Odert

TL;DR
This study reconstructs the evolution of stellar high-energy emission and initial planetary atmospheres in the Kepler-11 system, revealing insights into star activity and planetary atmospheric history using a novel framework.
Contribution
We developed a framework to infer stellar high-energy emission history and initial planetary atmospheric mass fractions from current planetary data, applied to the Kepler-11 system.
Findings
Star likely evolved as a slow rotator with high-energy emission 1-10 times that of the Sun at 150 Myr.
Constrained initial atmospheric mass fractions for five of the six planets, with specific percentage ranges.
Suggested higher planetary masses for some planets compared to previous transit timing variation estimates.
Abstract
The atmospheres of close-in planets are strongly influenced by mass loss driven by the high-energy (X-ray and extreme ultraviolet, EUV) irradiation of the host star, particularly during the early stages of evolution. We recently developed a framework to exploit this connection and enable us to recover the past evolution of the stellar high-energy emission from the present-day properties of its planets, if the latter retains some remnants of their primordial hydrogen-dominated atmospheres. Furthermore, the framework can also provide constraints on planetary initial atmospheric mass fractions. The constraints on the output parameters improve when more planets can be simultaneously analysed. This makes the Kepler-11 system, which hosts six planets with bulk densities between 0.66 and 2.45g cm^{-3}, an ideal target. Our results indicate that the star has likely evolved as a slow rotator…
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