HST PanCET program: Non-detection of atmospheric escape in the warm Saturn-sized planet WASP-29 b
L. A. dos Santos, V. Bourrier, D. Ehrenreich, J. Sanz-Forcada, M., L\'opez-Morales, D. K. Sing, A. Garc\'ia Mu\~noz, G. W. Henry, P. Lavvas, A., Lecavelier des Etangs, T. Mikal-Evans, A. Vidal-Madjar, H. R. Wakeford

TL;DR
This study used Hubble Space Telescope observations to investigate atmospheric escape in the warm Saturn-sized exoplanet WASP-29 b, finding no definitive signs of escape and placing upper limits on atmospheric loss rates.
Contribution
First detailed UV observational constraints on atmospheric escape in a Saturn-sized exoplanet, expanding understanding beyond hot Jupiters and warm Neptunes.
Findings
No significant in-transit H I Lyman-alpha absorption detected.
Detected a 39% in-transit flux decrease in C II emission, but with uncertain origin.
Estimated atmospheric escape rate of 4 x 10^9 g/s based on energy-limited model.
Abstract
(Abridged) Short-period gas giant exoplanets are susceptible to intense atmospheric escape due to their large scale heights and strong high-energy irradiation. This process is thought to occur ubiquitously, but to date we have only detected direct evidence of atmospheric escape in hot Jupiters and warm Neptunes. The paucity of cases for intermediate, Saturn-sized exoplanets at varying levels of irradiation precludes a detailed understanding of the underlying physics in atmospheric escape of hot gas giants. Our objectives here are to assess the high-energy environment of the warm ( K) Saturn WASP-29 b and search for signatures of atmospheric escape. We used far-ultraviolet (FUV) observations from the Hubble Space Telescope to analyze the flux time series of H I, C II, Si III, Si IV, and N V during the transit of WASP-29 b. At 3 confidence, we rule out any…
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