How to identify exoplanet surfaces using atmospheric trace species in hydrogen-dominated atmospheres
Xinting Yu, Julianne I. Moses, Jonathan J. Fortney, Xi Zhang

TL;DR
This study proposes using atmospheric trace species as proxies to identify the presence and depth of surfaces on sub-Neptune exoplanets, demonstrated through photochemical modeling of K2-18b.
Contribution
It introduces a novel framework linking trace atmospheric species to surface detection and depth estimation on hydrogen-dominated exoplanets.
Findings
Surface location significantly affects trace species abundances.
Seven chemical species are most sensitive to surface presence.
Ratios of observed to no-surface abundances can indicate surface depth.
Abstract
Sub-Neptunes (Rp~1.25-4 REarth) remain the most commonly detected exoplanets to date. However, it remains difficult for observations to tell whether these intermediate-sized exoplanets have surfaces and where their surfaces are located. Here we propose that the abundances of trace species in the visible atmospheres of these sub-Neptunes can be used as proxies for determining the existence of surfaces and approximate surface conditions. As an example, we used a state-of-the-art photochemical model to simulate the atmospheric evolution of K2-18b and investigate its final steady-state composition with surfaces located at different pressures levels (Psurf). We find the surface location has a significant impact on the atmospheric abundances of trace species, making them deviate significantly from their thermochemical equilibrium and "no-surface" conditions. This result arises primarily…
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