Continuous helium absorption from the leading and trailing tails of WASP-107b
Vigneshwaran Krishnamurthy, Yann Carteret, Caroline Piaulet-Ghorayeb, Jared Splinter, Dhvani Doshi, Michael Radica, Louis-Philippe Coulombe, Romain Allart, Vincent Bourrier, Nicolas B. Cowan, David Lafreni\`ere, Lo\"ic Albert, Lisa Dang, Ray Jayawardhana, Doug Johnstone

TL;DR
This study uses JWST observations to detect continuous helium absorption and water in the atmosphere of exoplanet WASP-107b, revealing an extended thermosphere and atmospheric escape processes.
Contribution
First detection of continuous helium absorption before, during, and after transit, indicating an extended thermosphere and outflow in WASP-107b with high-precision JWST data.
Findings
Helium absorption detected 1.5 hours before ingress
Maximum transit depth of 2.395% at helium triplet
Water absorption detected with log10 H2O=-2.5
Abstract
The detection of helium escaping the atmosphere of exoplanets has revolutionized our understanding of atmospheric escape and exoplanetary evolution. Using high-precision spectroscopic observations from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) NIRISS-SOSS mode, we report the detection of significant helium absorption during the pre-transit phase of WASP-107b (17), as well as in the transit and post-transit phases. This unique continuous helium absorption begins approximately 1.5 hours before the planet's ingress and reveals the presence of an extended thermosphere. The observations show a maximum transit depth of 2.395 0.01 near the helium triplet (36; at NIRISS-SOSS resolution 700). Our ellipsoidal model of the planetary thermosphere matches well the measured light curve suggesting an outflow extending to tens of planetary radii. Furthermore, we…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle accelerators and beam dynamics · Spacecraft and Cryogenic Technologies · Superconducting Materials and Applications
