Hubble's Multi-Year Search for Exospheres in the TRAPPIST-1 System Reveals Frequent Microflares
David Berardo, Julien de Wit, Michael Gillon, Ward S. Howard, Vincent Bourrier, Matthew W. Cotton, Florian Quatresooz, L\'eonie Hoerner, Emeline Bolmont, Artem Burdanov, Adam J. Burgasser, Brice-Olivier Demory, David Enhrenreich, Susan M. Lederer, Benjamin V. Rackham

TL;DR
This study uses Hubble Space Telescope data to investigate the exospheres of TRAPPIST-1's planets, revealing frequent microflares that impact atmospheric escape measurements and stellar activity understanding.
Contribution
It provides the first multi-year analysis linking stellar microflares to variability in Ly-$\alpha$ observations and exosphere detection limits in the TRAPPIST-1 system.
Findings
Upper limits on planetary atmospheric escape rates were established.
Frequent microflares of ~$10^{29}$ erg were detected on sub-hour timescales.
Stellar rotation period of approximately 3.27 days was confirmed.
Abstract
Ly- observations provide a powerful probe of stellar activity and atmospheric escape in exoplanetary systems. We present here an analysis of 104 HST/STIS orbits monitoring the TRAPPIST-1 system between 2017 and 2022, covering 3--5 transits for each of its seven planets. We rule out transit depths , which translates into an upper limit on the escape rate of /Gyr for planet b ( is the Earth-ocean-equivalent hydrogen content), in agreement with recent claims that planet b should be airless. These upper limits are 3 times larger than expected from the photon noise due to a large baseline scatter, which we ultimately link to TRAPPIST-1's intrinsic Ly- variability from frequent ``microflares.'' While JWST observations of TRAPPIST-1 in the near infrared have shown that -erg flares occur every 6 hours, we report here…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdaptive optics and wavefront sensing · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · History and Developments in Astronomy
