Morphology of Hydrodynamic Winds: A Study of Planetary Winds in Stellar Environments
| dc.contributor.author | McCann, John | |
| dc.contributor.author | Murray-Clay, Ruth A. | |
| dc.contributor.author | Kratter, Kaitlin M. | |
| dc.contributor.author | Krumholz, Mark | |
| dc.date.accessioned | 2021-05-06T02:56:46Z | |
| dc.date.issued | 2019-03-07 | |
| dc.date.updated | 2020-12-27T07:24:09Z | |
| dc.description.abstract | Bathed in intense ionizing radiation, close-in gaseous planets undergo hydrodynamic atmospheric escape, which ejects the upper extent of their atmospheres into the interplanetary medium. Ultraviolet detections of escaping gas around transiting planets corroborate such a framework. Exposed to the stellar environment, the outflow is shaped by its interaction with the stellar wind and by the planet's orbit. We model these effects using Athena to perform 3D radiative-hydrodynamic simulations of tidally locked hydrogen atmospheres receiving large amounts of ionizing extreme-ultraviolet flux in various stellar environments for the low-magnetic-field case. Through a step-by-step exploration of orbital and stellar wind effects on the planetary outflow, we find three structurally distinct stellar wind regimes: weak, intermediate, and strong. We perform synthetic Ly alpha observations and find unique observational signatures for each regime. A weak stellar wind-which cannot confine the planetary outflow, leading to a torus of material around the star-has a pretransit, redshifted dayside arm and a slightly redward-skewed spectrum during transit. The intermediate regime truncates the dayside outflow at large distances from the planet and causes periodic disruptions of the outflow, producing observational signatures that mimic a double transit. The first of these dips is blueshifted and precedes the optical transit. Finally, strong stellar winds completely confine the outflow into a cometary tail and accelerate the outflow outward, producing large blueshifted signals posttransit. Across all three regimes, large signals occur far outside of transit, offering motivation to continue ultraviolet observations outside of direct transit. | en_AU |
| dc.description.sponsorship | This material is based on work supported by the National Science Foundation under grants No. AST-1411536 and -1228509. M.R.K. is supported by a Future Fellowship from the Australian Research Council, award No. FT180100375. | en_AU |
| dc.format.mimetype | application/pdf | en_AU |
| dc.identifier.issn | 0004-637X | en_AU |
| dc.identifier.uri | http://hdl.handle.net/1885/232498 | |
| dc.language.iso | en_AU | en_AU |
| dc.provenance | https://v2.sherpa.ac.uk/id/publication/6401..."Author accepted manuscript can be made open access on non-commercial institutional repository after 12 month embargo" from SHERPA/RoMEO site (as at 12.5.2021) | |
| dc.publisher | IOP Publishing | en_AU |
| dc.relation | http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/FT180100375 | en_AU |
| dc.rights | © 2019 The American Astronomical Society | en_AU |
| dc.source | The Astrophysical Journal | en_AU |
| dc.subject | hydrodynamics | en_AU |
| dc.subject | methods: numerical | en_AU |
| dc.subject | planet–star interactions | en_AU |
| dc.subject | planets and satellites: atmospheres | en_AU |
| dc.subject | planets and satellites: gaseous planets | en_AU |
| dc.subject | radiative transfer | en_AU |
| dc.title | Morphology of Hydrodynamic Winds: A Study of Planetary Winds in Stellar Environments | en_AU |
| dc.type | Journal article | en_AU |
| dcterms.accessRights | Open Access | |
| dcterms.dateAccepted | 2019-01-21 | |
| local.bibliographicCitation.issue | 89 | en_AU |
| local.bibliographicCitation.lastpage | 32 | en_AU |
| local.bibliographicCitation.startpage | 1 | en_AU |
| local.contributor.affiliation | McCann, John, University of California | en_AU |
| local.contributor.affiliation | Murray-Clay, Ruth A., University of California | en_AU |
| local.contributor.affiliation | Kratter, Kaitlin M., University of Arizona | en_AU |
| local.contributor.affiliation | Krumholz, Mark, College of Science, ANU | en_AU |
| local.contributor.authoruid | Krumholz, Mark, u1000557 | en_AU |
| local.description.notes | Imported from ARIES | en_AU |
| local.identifier.absfor | 020110 - Stellar Astronomy and Planetary Systems | en_AU |
| local.identifier.absfor | 080110 - Simulation and Modelling | en_AU |
| local.identifier.absfor | 020108 - Planetary Science (excl. Extraterrestrial Geology) | en_AU |
| local.identifier.absseo | 970102 - Expanding Knowledge in the Physical Sciences | en_AU |
| local.identifier.ariespublication | u3102795xPUB2177 | en_AU |
| local.identifier.citationvolume | 873 | en_AU |
| local.identifier.doi | 10.3847/1538-4357/ab05b8 | en_AU |
| local.identifier.thomsonID | 4.60771E+11 | |
| local.publisher.url | https://iopscience.iop.org/ | en_AU |
| local.type.status | Accepted Version | en_AU |
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