The Implications of Thermal Hydrodynamic Atmospheric Escape on the TRAPPIST-1 Planets
Megan T. Gialluca, Rory Barnes, Victoria S. Meadows, Rodolfo Garcia,, Jessica Birky, Eric Agol

TL;DR
This study models atmospheric escape and water loss on TRAPPIST-1 planets, incorporating observational uncertainties to predict water and oxygen retention, aiding understanding of their atmospheric evolution and habitability potential.
Contribution
It introduces a probabilistic framework accounting for stellar and planetary uncertainties to evaluate atmospheric escape outcomes for TRAPPIST-1 planets.
Findings
Maximum water loss ranges for planets TRAPPIST-1e, f, g, h.
Predicted initial water content for planets based on current observations.
Outer planets likely retain over 1.5 Earth oceans of water after entering habitable zone.
Abstract
JWST observations of the 7-planet TRAPPIST-1 system will provide an excellent opportunity to test outcomes of stellar-driven evolution of terrestrial planetary atmospheres, including atmospheric escape, ocean loss and abiotic oxygen production. While most previous studies use a single luminosity evolution for the host star, we incorporate observational uncertainties in stellar mass, luminosity evolution, system age, and planetary parameters to statistically explore the plausible range of planetary atmospheric escape outcomes. We present probabilistic distributions of total water loss and oxygen production as a function of initial water content, for planets with initially pure water atmospheres and no interior-atmosphere exchange. We find that the interior planets are desiccated for initial water contents below 50 Earth oceans. For TRAPPIST-1e, f, g, and h, we report maximum water loss…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Planetary Science and Exploration · Spacecraft and Cryogenic Technologies
