The influence of host star activity evolution on the population of super-Earths and mini-Neptunes
Laura Ketzer, Katja Poppenhaeger

TL;DR
This study investigates how the evolution of stellar magnetic activity influences atmospheric mass loss in small exoplanets, affecting the observed radius gap and its evolution over hundreds of millions of years.
Contribution
It introduces realistic stellar activity evolution tracks into models, revealing their impact on the exoplanet radius gap and its observable properties over time.
Findings
Different stellar activity decay tracks alter the planet radius gap density.
The first 100 million years are crucial for shaping the radius gap.
Significant evolution of the gap occurs over at least 500-600 million years.
Abstract
The detected exoplanet population displays a dearth of planets with sizes of about two Earth radii, the so-called radius gap. This is interpreted as an evolutionary effect driven by a variety of possible atmospheric mass loss processes of exoplanets. For mass loss driven by an exoplanet's irradiation by stellar X-ray and extreme-UV photons, the time evolution of the stellar magnetic activity is important. It is known from observations of open stellar clusters that stars of the same age and mass do not all follow the same time evolution of activity-induced X-ray and extreme-UV luminosities. Here we explore how a realistic spread of different stellar activity tracks influences the mass loss and radius evolution of a simulated population of small exoplanets and the observable properties of the radius gap. Our results show qualitatively that different saturation time scales, i.e. the young…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Space Exploration and Technology
