Hot super-Earths stripped by their host stars

2016 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Hot super-Earths stripped by their host stars​
Lundkvist, M. S.; Kjeldsen, H.; Albrecht, S.; Davies, G. R.; Basu, S.; Huber, D. & Justesen, A. B. et al.​ (2016) 
Nature Communications7 art. 11201​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms11201 

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Authors
Lundkvist, M. S.; Kjeldsen, Hans; Albrecht, S.; Davies, G. R.; Basu, S.; Huber, D.; Justesen, Anders B.; Karoff, Christoffer; Aguirre, Victor Silva; van Eylen, V.; Vang, C.; Arentoft, T.; Barclay, Thomas; Bedding, Timothy R.; Campante, Tiago L.; Chaplin, W. J.; Christensen-Dalsgaard, Joergen; Elsworth, Yvonne P.; Gilliland, Ronald L.; Handberg, Rasmus; Hekker, Saskia; Kawaler, Steven D.; Lund, Mikkel N.; Metcalfe, T. S.; Miglio, Andrea; Rowe, Jason F.; Stello, Dennis; Tingley, B.; White, Timothy R.
Abstract
Simulations predict that hot super-Earth sized exoplanets can have their envelopes stripped by photoevaporation, which would present itself as a lack of these exoplanets. However, this absence in the exoplanet population has escaped a firm detection. Here we demonstrate, using asteroseismology on a sample of exoplanets and exoplanet candidates observed during the Kepler mission that, while there is an abundance of super-Earth sized exoplanets with low incident fluxes, none are found with high incident fluxes. We do not find any exoplanets with radii between 2.2 and 3.8 Earth radii with incident flux above 650 times the incident flux on Earth. This gap in the population of exoplanets is explained by evaporation of volatile elements and thus supports the predictions. The confirmation of a hot-super-Earth desert caused by evaporation will add an important constraint on simulations of planetary systems, since they must be able to reproduce the dearth of close-in super-Earths.
Issue Date
2016
Status
published
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Journal
Nature Communications 
Project
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/FP7/267864/EU//ASTERISK
Organization
Fakultät für Physik 
ISSN
2041-1723

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