Examinando por Autor "Dos Santos, L. A."
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Publicación Acceso Abierto HST PanCET program: non-detection of atmospheric escape in the warm Saturn-sized planet WASP-29 b(EDP Sciences, 2021-05-07) Dos Santos, L. A.; Bourrier, V.; Ehrenreich, D.; Sanz Forcada, J.; López Morales, M.; Sing, D. K.; García Muñoz, Antonio; Henry, G. W.; Lavvas, P.; Lecavelier des Etangs, A.; Mikal Evans, T.; Vidal Madjar, A.; Wakeford, H. R.; Centre National D'Etudes Spatiales (CNES); European Research Council (ERC); Agencia Estatal de Investigación (AEI); Dos Santos, L. A. [0000-0002-2248-3838]; Sanz Forcada, J. [0000-0002-1600-7835]; López Morales, M. [0000-0003-3204-8183]; Sing, D. K. [0000-0001-6050-7645]; García Muñoz, A. [0000-0003-1756-4825]; Henry, G. W. [0000-0003-4155-8513]; Lecavelier des Etangs, A. [0000-0002-5637-5253]; Mikal Evans, T. [0000-0001-5442-1300]Short-period gas giant exoplanets are susceptible to intense atmospheric escape due to their large scale heights and strong high-energy irradiation. This process is thought to occur ubiquitously, but to date we have only detected direct evidence of atmospheric escape in hot Jupiters and warm Neptunes. The latter planets are particularly more sensitive to escape-driven evolution as a result of their lower gravities with respect to Jupiter-sized planets. But the paucity of cases for intermediate, Saturn-sized exoplanets at varying levels of irradiation precludes a detailed understanding of the underlying physics in atmospheric escape of hot gas giants. Aiming to address this issue, our objectives here are to assess the high-energy environment of the warm (Teq = 970 K) Saturn WASP-29 b and search for signatures of atmospheric escape. We used far-ultraviolet observations from the Hubble Space Telescope to analyze the flux time series of H I, C II, Si III, Si IV, and N V during the transit of WASP-29 b. At 88 pc, a large portion of the Lyman-α core of the K4V-type host WASP-29 is attenuated by interstellar medium absorption, limiting our ability to probe the escape of H at velocities between −84 and +35 km s−1. At 3σ confidence, we rule out any in-transit absorption of H I larger than 92% in the Lyman-α blue wing and 19% in the red wing. We found an in-transit flux decrease of 39%−11%+12% in the ground-state C II emission line at 1334.5 Å. But due to this signal being significantly present in only one visit, it is difficult to attribute a planetary or stellar origin to the ground-state C II signal. We place 3σ absorption upper limits of 40, 49, and 24% on Si III, Si IV, and for excited-state C II at 1335.7 Å, respectively. Low activity levels and the faint X-ray luminosity suggest that WASP-29 is an old, inactive star. Nonetheless, an energy-limited approximation combined with the reconstructed EUV spectrum of the host suggests that the planet is losing its atmosphere at a relatively large rate of 4 × 109 g s−1. The non-detection at Lyman-α could be partly explained by a low fraction of escaping neutral hydrogen, or by the state of fast radiative blow-out we infer from the reconstructed Lyman-α line.Publicación Acceso Abierto Mass determinations of the three mini-Neptunes transiting TOI-125(Oxford Academics: Oxford University Press, 2020-01-23) Nielsen, L. D.; Gandolfi, D.; Armstrong, D. J.; Jenkins, J. S.; Fridlund, M.; Santos, N. C.; Dai, F.; Adibekyan, V.; Luque, R.; Steffen, J. H.; Esposito, M.; Meru, F.; Sabotta, S.; Bolmont, É.; Kossakowski, D.; Otegi, J. F.; Murgas Alcaino, F.; Stalport, M.; Rodler, F.; Díaz, M. R.; Kurtovic, N. T.; Ricker, G.; Vanderspek, R.; Latham, D. W.; Seager, S.; Winn, J. N.; Jenkins, J. M.; Allart, R.; Almenara, J. M.; Barrado, D.; Barros, S. C. C.; Bayliss, D.; Berdiñas, Z. M.; Boisse, I.; Bouchy, F.; Boyd, P.; Brown, D. J. A.; Bryant, E. M.; Burke, C. J.; Cochran, W. D.; Cooke, B. F.; Demangeon, O. D. S.; Díaz, R. F.; Dittman, J.; Dorn, C.; Dumusque, X.; García, R. A.; González Cuesta, L.; Georgieva, I.; Guerrero, N.; Hatzes, A. P.; Helled, R.; Henze, C. E.; Hojjatpanah, S.; Korth, J.; Lam, K. W. F.; Lillo Box, J.; López, T. A.; Livingston, J.; Mathur, S.; Mousis, O.; Narita, N.; Osborn, Hugh P.; Pallé, E.; Peña Rojas, P. A.; Persson, C. M.; Quinn, S. N.; Rauer, H.; Redfield, S.; Santerne, A.; Dos Santos, L. A.; Seidel, J. V.; Sousa, S. G.; Ting, E. B.; Turbet, M.; Udry, S.; Vanderburg, A.; Van Eylen, V.; Vines, J. I.; Wheatley, P. J.; Wilson, P. A.; Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Científico y Tecnológico (FONDECYT); Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF); Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG); Agencia Estatal de Investigación (AEI); European Southern Observatory (ESO); Swiss National Centre of Competence inResearch (NCCR); National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA); Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia (FCT); European Research Council (ERC); Vanderburg, A. [0000-0001-7246-5438]; Dos Santos, L. [0000-0002-2248-3838]; Barrado, D. [0000-0002-5971-9242]; Cochran, W. [0000-0001-9662-3496]; Lillo Box, J. [0000-0003-3742-1987]; Barros, S. [0000-0003-2434-3625]; Stalport, M. [0000-0003-0996-6402]; Dorn, C. [0000-0001-6110-4610]; Nielsen, L. D. [0000-0002-5254-2499]; Seidel, J. V. [0000-0002-7990-9596]; Diaz, M. R. [0000-0002-2100-3257]; Bolmont, E. [0000-0001-5657-4503]; Adibekyan, V. [0000-0002-0601-6199]; Van Eylen, V. [0000-0001-5542-8870]; Armstrong, D. [0000-0002-5080-4117]; Korth, J. [0000-0002-0076-6239]; Díaz, R. [0000-0001-9289-5160]; Santos, N. [0000-0003-4422-2919]; Luque, R. [0000-0002-4671-2957]; Turbet, M. [0000-0003-2260-9856]; Mathur, S. [0000-0002-0129-0316]; Strom, P. A. [0000-0002-7823-1090]; Sabotta, S. [0000-0001-9078-5574]; Wheatley, P. [0000-0003-1452-2240]; Hojjatpanah, S. [0000-0002-0417-1902]; Unidad de Excelencia Científica María de Maeztu Centro de Astrobiología del Instituto Nacional de Técnica Aeroespacial y CSIC, MDM-2017-0737The Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite, TESS, is currently carrying out an all-sky search for small planets transiting bright stars. In the first year of the TESS survey, a steady progress was made in achieving the mission's primary science goal of establishing bulk densities for 50 planets smaller than Neptune. During that year, the TESS's observations were focused on the southern ecliptic hemisphere, resulting in the discovery of three mini-Neptunes orbiting the star T01-125, a V = 11,0 KO dwarf. We present intensive HARPS radial velocity observations, yielding precise mass measurements for TO1-125b, TOI-125c, and TOI-125d. TOI-125b has an orbital period of 4,65 d, a radius of 2,726 + 0,075 RE, a mass of 9,50 0,88 ME, and is near the 2:1 mean motion resonance with TOI-125c at 9.15 d. TOI-125c has a similar radius of 2,759 0.10 RE and a mass of 6,63 + 0,99 ME, being the puffiest of the three planets. T01-125d has an orbital period of 19,98 d and a radius of 2.93 + 0,17 RE and mass 13,6 1,2 ME, For T01-125b and d, we find unusual high eccentricities of 0.19 0.04 and 0.17+(c):(!,(, respectively. Our analysis also provides upper mass limits for the two low-SNR planet candidates in the system; for T01-125.04 (Rp = 1.36 RE, P = 0.53 d), we find a 2a upper mass limit of 1.6 ME, whereas T01-125.05 (RP = 4.2-'2E44 RE, P = 13.28 d) is unlikely a viable planet candidate with an upper mass limit of 2.7 ME. We discuss the internal structure of the three confirmed planets, as well as dynamical stability and system architecture for this intriguing exoplanet system.Publicación Acceso Abierto The Hubble PanCET Program: A Metal-rich Atmosphere for the Inflated Hot Jupiter HAT-P-41b(IOP Science Publishing, 2021-01-06) Sheppard, K. B.; Welbanks, L.; Mandell, A. M.; Madhusudhan, N.; Nikolov, N.; Deming, D. L.; Henry, G. W.; Williamson, M. H.; Sing, D. K.; López Morales, M.; Ih, J.; Sanz Forcada, J.; Lavvas, P.; Ballester, G. E.; Evans, T. M.; García Muñoz, Antonio; Dos Santos, L. A.; National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA); Sheppard, K. B. [0000-0003-4552-9541]; Welbanks, L. [0000-0003-0156-4564]; Mandell, A. M. [0000-0002-8119-3355]; Madhusudhan, M. [0000-0002-4869-000X]; Nikolov, N. [0000-0002-6500-3574]; Deming, D. [0000-0001-5727-4094]; Sing, D. K. [0000-0001-6050-7645]; Henry, G. W. [0000-0003-4155-8513]; López Morales, M. [0000-0003-3204-8183]; Ih, J. [0000-0003-2775-653X]; Sanz Forcada, J. [0000-0002-1600-7835]; Lavvas, P. [0000-0002-5360-3660]; Evans, T. M. [0000-0001-5442-1300]; García Muñoz, A. [0000-0003-1756-4825]; Dos Santos, L. A. [0000-0002-2248-3838]We present a comprehensive analysis of the 0.3–5 μm transit spectrum for the inflated hot Jupiter HAT-P-41b. The planet was observed in transit with Hubble STIS and WFC3 as part of the Hubble Panchromatic Comparative Exoplanet Treasury (PanCET) program, and we combine those data with warm Spitzer transit observations. We extract transit depths from each of the data sets, presenting the STIS transit spectrum (0.29–0.93 μm) for the first time. We retrieve the transit spectrum both with a free-chemistry retrieval suite (AURA) and a complementary chemical equilibrium retrieval suite (PLATON) to constrain the atmospheric properties at the day–night terminator. Both methods provide an excellent fit to the observed spectrum. Both AURA and PLATON retrieve a metal-rich atmosphere for almost all model assumptions (most likely O/H ratio of ${\mathrm{log}}_{10}Z/{Z}_{\odot }={1.46}_{-0.68}^{+0.53}$ and ${\mathrm{log}}_{10}Z/{Z}_{\odot }={2.33}_{-0.25}^{+0.23}$, respectively); this is driven by a 4.9σ detection of H2O as well as evidence of gas absorption in the optical (>2.7σ detection) due to Na, AlO, and/or VO/TiO, though no individual species is strongly detected. Both retrievals determine the transit spectrum to be consistent with a clear atmosphere, with no evidence of haze or high-altitude clouds. Interior modeling constraints on the maximum atmospheric metallicity (${\mathrm{log}}_{10}Z/{Z}_{\odot }\lt 1.7$) favor the AURA results. The inferred elemental oxygen abundance suggests that HAT-P-41b has one of the most metal-rich atmospheres of any hot Jupiters known to date. Overall, the inferred high metallicity and high inflation make HAT-P-41b an interesting test case for planet formation theories.Publicación Acceso Abierto The Hubble PanCET program: long-term chromospheric evolution and flaring activity of the M dwarf host GJ 3470(EDP Sciences, 2021-06-08) Bourrier, V.; Dos Santos, L. A.; Sanz Forcada, J.; García Muñoz, Antonio; Henry, G. W.; Lavvas, P.; Lecavelier, A.; López Morales, M.; Mikal Evans, T.; Sing, D. K.; Wakeford, H. R.; Ehrenreich, D.; European Research Council (ERC)Neptune-size exoplanets seem particularly sensitive to atmospheric evaporation, making it essential to characterize the stellar high-energy radiation that drives this mechanism. This is particularly important with M dwarfs, which emit a large and variable fraction of their luminosity in the ultraviolet and can display strong flaring behavior. The warm Neptune GJ 3470b, hosted by an M2 dwarf, was found to harbor a giant exosphere of neutral hydrogen thanks to three transits observed with the Hubble Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (HST/STIS). Here we report on three additional transit observations from the Panchromatic Comparative Exoplanet Treasury program, obtained with the HST Cosmic Origin Spectrograph. These data confirm the absorption signature from GJ 3470b’s exosphere in the stellar Lyman-α line and demonstrate its stability over time. No planetary signatures are detected in other stellar lines, setting a 3σ limit on GJ 3470b’s far-ultraviolet (FUV) radius at 1.3 times its Roche lobe radius. We detect three flares from GJ 3470. They show different spectral energy distributions but peak consistently in the Si III line, which traces intermediate-temperature layers in the transition region. These layers appear to play a particular role in GJ 3470’s activity as emission lines that form at lower or higher temperatures than Si III evolved differently over the long term. Based on the measured emission lines, we derive synthetic X-ray and extreme-ultraviolet (X+EUV, or XUV) spectra for the six observed quiescent phases, covering one year, as well as for the three flaring episodes. Our results suggest that most of GJ 3470’s quiescent high-energy emission comes from the EUV domain, with flares amplifying the FUV emission more strongly. The neutral hydrogen photoionization lifetimes and mass loss derived for GJ 3470b show little variation over the epochs, in agreement with the stability of the exosphere. Simulations informed by our XUV spectra are required to understand the atmospheric structure and evolution of GJ 3470b and the role played by evaporation in the formation of the hot-Neptune desert.