DREAM: III.A helium survey in exoplanets on the edge of the hot Neptune desert with GIANO-B@TNG
G. Guilluy, V. Bourrier, Y. Jaziri, W. Dethier, D. Mounzer, P. Giacobbe, M. Attia, R. Allart, A. S. Bonomo, L. A. Dos Santos, M. Rainer, A. Sozzetti

TL;DR
This study conducted a uniform high-resolution survey of nine exoplanets near the hot Neptune desert using GIANO-B, finding no HeI absorption and providing upper limits to understand atmospheric evaporation's role in desert formation.
Contribution
It presents the first homogeneous HeI transmission spectroscopy survey of planets at the edge of the hot Neptune desert, offering new constraints on atmospheric escape processes.
Findings
No HeI absorption detected in any target.
HeI absorption correlates with stellar mass and XUV flux.
Mass-loss rates show no clear correlation, indicating complex evaporation processes.
Abstract
The population of close-in exoplanets features a desert of hot Neptunes whose origin is uncertain. These planets may have lost their atmosphere, eroding into mini-Neptunes and super-Earths. Direct observations of evaporating atmospheres are essential to derive mass-loss estimates and constrain this scenario. The metastable 1083.3nm HeI triplet represents a powerful diagnostic of atmospheric evaporation since it traces the hot gas in extended exoplanet atmospheres, is observable from the ground, and is weakly affected by interstellar medium absorption. We conducted a uniform HeI transmission spectroscopy survey, focusing on 9 planets located at the edges of the Neptunian desert, aiming to gain insights into the role of photo-evaporation in its formation. We observed one transit per planet using the high-resolution, near-infrared spectrograph GIANO-B on the Telescopio Nazionale Galileo.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Spectroscopy and Laser Applications
