A search for He I airglow emission from the hot Jupiter tau Boo b
Yapeng Zhang, I.A.G. Snellen, P. Molli\`ere, F. J. Alonso-Floriano, R., K. Webb, M. Brogi, A. Wyttenbach

TL;DR
This study investigates the potential to detect helium I 10830 Å airglow emission from hot Jupiter tau Boo b using high-resolution spectroscopy, finding current observations are not sensitive enough but future instruments may succeed.
Contribution
The paper provides the first observational search for He I airglow emission from tau Boo b and estimates its detectability with upcoming high-resolution spectrographs.
Findings
He I emission was not detected in tau Boo b.
Current observations are about 8 times less sensitive than needed.
Future instruments could potentially detect the helium airglow.
Abstract
The helium absorption line at 10830 {\AA}, originating from the metastable triplet state 2S, has been suggested as an excellent probe for the extended atmospheres of hot Jupiters and their hydrodynamic escape processes, and has recently been detected in the transmission spectra of a handful of planets. The isotropic re-emission will lead to helium airglow that may be observable at other orbital phases. The goal of this paper is to investigate the detectability of He I emission at 10830 {\AA} in the atmospheres of exoplanets using high-resolution spectroscopy, providing insights into the properties of the upper atmospheres of close-in gas giants. We estimated the expected strength of He I emission in hot Jupiters based on their transmission signal. We searched for the He I 10830 {\AA} emission feature in tau Boo b in three nights of high-resolution spectra taken by CARMENES at the…
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