Heating and ionization by non-thermal electrons in the upper atmospheres of water-rich exoplanets
A. Garc\'ia Mu\~noz

TL;DR
This study models how non-thermal electrons from stellar radiation heat and ionize water-rich exoplanet atmospheres, revealing their significant impact on atmospheric evolution and detectability, and emphasizing the need to include these effects in models.
Contribution
It provides a detailed Monte Carlo simulation of photoelectron interactions in water-dominated atmospheres, highlighting their role in heating and ionization processes for the first time.
Findings
Energy partition into heating is similar in H and O-H mixtures at moderate ionization.
O atoms efficiently sink energy at very low ionization levels.
Water-rich exoplanets respond differently to stellar irradiation, affecting atmospheric composition.
Abstract
Context. The long-term evolution of an atmosphere and the remote detectability of its chemical constituents are susceptible to how the atmospheric gas responds to stellar irradiation. The response remains poorly characterized for water and its dissociation products, however, this knowledge is relevant to our understanding of hypothetical water-rich exoplanets. Aims: Our work investigates the effect of photoelectrons, namely, the non-thermal electrons produced by photoionizing stellar radiation on the heating and ionization of extended atmospheres dominated by the dissociation products of water. Methods: We used a Monte Carlo model and up-to-date collision cross sections to simulate the slowing down of photoelectrons in O-H mixtures for a range of fractional ionizations and photoelectron energies. Results: We find that that the fraction of energy of a photoelectron that goes into heating…
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