The Variable Detection of Atmospheric Escape around the young, Hot Neptune AU Mic b
Keighley E. Rockcliffe, Elisabeth R. Newton, Allison Youngblood,, Girish M. Duvvuri, Peter Plavchan, Peter Gao, Andrew W. Mann, Patrick J., Lowrance

TL;DR
This study reports the first detection of atmospheric hydrogen escape from the young Neptune-sized exoplanet AU Mic b, revealing variable Lyman-alpha absorption likely influenced by stellar wind and photoionization.
Contribution
It provides the first observational evidence of atmospheric escape around AU Mic b and discusses the influence of stellar wind and photoionization on this process.
Findings
Detected neutral hydrogen escape ahead of AU Mic b
Observed variability in Lyman-alpha absorption linked to stellar activity
Estimated high-velocity hydrogen outflow with specific column density
Abstract
Photoevaporation is a potential explanation for several features within exoplanet demographics. Atmospheric escape observed in young Neptune-sized exoplanets can provide insight into and characterize which mechanisms drive this evolution and at what times they dominate. AU Mic b is one such exoplanet, slightly larger than Neptune (4.19 Earth radii). It closely orbits a 23 Myr pre-Main Sequence M dwarf with a period of 8.46 days. We obtained two visits of AU Mic b at Lyman-alpha with HST/STIS. One flare within the first HST visit is characterized and removed from our search for a planetary transit. We present a non-detection in our first visit followed by the detection of escaping neutral hydrogen ahead of the planet in our second visit. The outflow absorbed about 30% of the star's Lyman-alpha blue-wing 2.5 hours before the planet's white-light transit. We estimate the highest velocity…
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