Giant tidal tails of helium escaping the hot Jupiter HAT-P-32 b

Open Access
Authors
  • Z. Zhang
  • C.V. Morley
  • M. Gully-Santiago
  • M. MacLeod
  • A. Oklopčić
  • J. Luna
  • Q.H. Tran
  • J.P. Ninan
  • S. Mahadevan
  • D.M. Krolikowski
  • W.D. Cochran
  • B.P. Bowler
  • M. Endl
  • G. Stefánsson ORCID logo
  • B.M. Tofflemire
  • A. Vanderburg
  • G.R. Zeimann
Publication date 09-06-2023
Journal Science Advances
Article number eadf8736
Volume | Issue number 9 | 23
Number of pages 14
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
Capturing planets in the act of losing their atmospheres provides rare opportunities to probe their evolution history. This analysis has been enabled by observations of the helium triplet at 10,833 angstrom, but past studies have focused on the narrow time window right around the planet's optical transit. We monitored the hot Jupiter HAT-P-32 b using high-resolution spectroscopy from the Hobby-Eberly Telescope covering the planet's full orbit. We detected helium escaping HAT-P-32 b at a 14σ significance,with extended leading and trailing tails spanning a projected length over 53 times the planet's radius. These tails are among the largest known structures associated with an exoplanet. We interpret our observations using three-dimensional hydrodynamic simulations, which predict Roche Lobe overflow with extended tails along the planet's orbital path.
Document type Article
Language English
Related dataset Giant Tidal Tails of Helium Escaping the Hot Jupiter HAT-P-32 b
Published at https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.adf8736
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