Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften (ÖAW) / Institut für Weltraumforschung (IWF), Graz, Austria, iwf.oeaw.ac.atDownload:2014.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
H. Lammer (1), P. Odert (2), M. Leitzinger (2), M. L. Khodachenko (1), M. Panchenko (1), Yu. N. Kulikov (3), T. L. Zhang (1), H. I. M. Lichtenegger (1),
Advertisements

IWF Graz … 1 H. Lammer (1), M. L. Khodachenko (1), H. I. M. Lichtenegger (1), Yu. N. Kulikov (2), N. V. Erkaev (3), G. Wuchterl (4), P. Odert (5), M. Leitzinger.
Plasma-induced Sputtering & Heating of Titan’s Atmosphere R. E. Johnson & O.J. Tucker Goal Understand role of the plasma in the evolution of Titan’s atmosphere.
Stellar Atmospheres: Hydrostatic Equilibrium 1 Hydrostatic Equilibrium Particle conservation.
Nebula to Protostar Giant molecular clouds within a nebula contract under the gravitational pressure, increasing its thermal energy. CO, NO, OH- Giant.
Plasmas in Space: From the Surface of the Sun to the Orbit of the Earth Steven R. Spangler, University of Iowa Division of Plasma Physics, American Physical.
PRECIPITATION OF HIGH-ENERGY PROTONS AND HYDROGEN ATOMS INTO THE UPPER ATMOSPHERES OF MARS AND VENUS Valery I. Shematovich Institute of Astronomy, Russian.
AST 111 Exoplanets II. What can we measure? Orbital period – Look at doppler shift or just watch it Orbital distance – Kepler’s 3 rd Law with orbital.
MAGNETIC FIELDS OF EXOPLANETS. FEATURES AND DETECTION UCM, 27th May 2014 Enrique Blanco Henríquez.
Exploring a Nearby Habitable World …. Orbiting an M-dwarf star Drake Deming NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center.
Chapter 19.
3-D Simulations of Magnetized Super Bubbles J. M. Stil N. D. Wityk R. Ouyed A. R. Taylor Department of Physics and Astronomy, The University of Calgary,
Solar wind interaction with the comet Halley and Venus
Source of Atomic Hydrogen in the Atmosphere of HD b Mao-Chang Liang Caltech Related publications 1. Liang et al. 2003, ApJ Letters, in press 2. Liang.
This set of slides This set of slides starts the topic of stellar evolution, overview, protostars, main sequence… Units covered: 59, 60, 61.
Is There Life Out There? Our Solar System (and beyond) Draw a picture of what you think life would look like on another planet, if it existed. Describe.
X-ray Universe 2011 The High-Energy Environment of Extrasolar Planets J. Schmitt Hamburger Sternwarte Internet:
What stellar properties can be learnt from planetary transits Adriana Válio Roque da Silva CRAAM/Mackenzie.
Planet Formation and the solar system REVIEW. The raw materials to form planets come most directly from what source?
Jeopardy Lives of Stars SunSun’s Layers Exploring Solar System Potpourri Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy.
Coronal Heating of an Active Region Observed by XRT on May 5, 2010 A Look at Quasi-static vs Alfven Wave Heating of Coronal Loops Amanda Persichetti Aad.
ABSTRACT This work concerns with the analysis and modelling of possible magnetohydrodynamic response of plasma of the solar low atmosphere (upper chromosphere,
Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften (ÖAW) / Institut für Weltraumforschung (IWF), Graz, Austria, T +43/316/ , iwf.oeaw.ac.atDownload:2013.
The Sun Earth Science - Mr. Gallagher. The Sun is the Earth's nearest star. Similar to most typical stars, it is a large ball of hot electrically charged.
The Evolution of the Universe Nicola Loaring. The Big Bang According to scientists the Universe began ~15 billion years ago in a hot Big Bang. At creation.
AST 111 Exoplanets I.
The EUV impact on ionosphere: J.-E. Wahlund and M. Yamauchi Swedish Institute of Space Physics (IRF) ON3 Response of atmospheres and magnetospheres of.
Main task  Upper atmospheres (and magnetospheres) in the context of solar/stellar wind plasma and radiation interaction Main research topics 1.Upper atmosphere.
Star Formation. Introduction Star-Forming Regions The Formation of Stars Like the Sun Stars of Other Masses Observations of Brown Dwarfs Observations.
Star Formation Star = large balls of gas that produce energy and shine…. unless old. Nuclear Fusion = combines light elements to create heavy ones….
Is There Life Out There? Our Solar System (and beyond) Draw a picture of what you think life would look like on another planet, if it existed. Describe.
The Life Cycles of Stars RVCC Planetarium - Last updated 7/23/03.
Light and Matter Astronomy 315 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 6.
Chapter 19 Star Formation
Workshop proposal to the Science Committee Planets under Extreme Stellar Conditions.
500K planet at 1.0, 0.5, 0.3 AU around a G2V Barman et al. (ApJ 556, 885, 2001)
1 Stellar Lifecycles The process by which stars are formed and use up their fuel. What exactly happens to a star as it uses up its fuel is strongly dependent.
Review for Quiz 2. Outline of Part 2 Properties of Stars  Distances, luminosities, spectral types, temperatures, sizes  Binary stars, methods of estimating.
Our Sun.
Saturn neutral particle modeling Overview of Enceladus/Titan research with possible application to Mercury Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory.
Photoevaporative Mass Loss From Hot Jupiters Ruth Murray-Clay Eugene Chiang UC Berkeley.
ASTROPHYSICS. Physical properties of star 1.SIZE spherical depends on mass, temperature, gravity & age Range- 0.2R to 220 R, R- solar radius = 6.96 x.
Stars Diamonds of the sky.
Spectroscopy of extrasolar planets atmosphere
Stellar Lifecycles The process by which stars are formed and use up their fuel. What exactly happens to a star as it uses up its fuel is strongly dependent.
Star Life Cycle Review. Transports energy from the radiative zone to the surface of the sun. Sunspot Corona Photosphere Convective zone.
PHYS 1621 Proton-proton cycle 3 steps. PHYS 1622 Layers of the Sun Mostly Hydrogen with about 25% Helium. Small amounts of heavier elements Gas described.
Warm Absorbers: Are They Disk Outflows? Daniel Proga UNLV.
Chapter 11 The Interstellar Medium
The Sun By: JGilliam The Sun’s CompositionIdentifying Stars Composition ▪ Hydrogen and Helium together make up 99% of the sun’s mass. ▪ 75% of the sun’s.
2003 UB313: The 10th Planet?. Extra-Solar or Exoplanets Planets around stars other than the Sun Difficult to observe Hundreds discovered (> 2000 so far)
2003 UB313: The 10th Planet?. Extra-Solar or Exoplanets Planets around stars other than the Sun Difficult to observe Hundreds discovered (> 2000 so far)
M. Yamauchi 1, H. Lammer 2, J.-E. Wahlund 3 1. Swedish Institute of Space Physics (IRF), Kiruna, Sweden 2. Space Research Institute (IWF), Graz, Austria.
Astro 18 – Section Week 2 EM Spectrum. ElectroMagnetic Radiation Energy moves in waves with electrical and magnetic components Energy moves in waves with.
STARS & their life cycles Like us, stars are born, grow older, become middle aged and eventually die!!! Unlike us, stars take billions of years to complete.
Aeronomy of extrasolar giant planets Tommi Koskinen (APL) APEX Meeting, Thursday 26th October 2006 HD b (an artist’s impression), © ESA 2004 (A.Vidal-Madjar)
GOAL: To understand the physics of active region decay, and the Quiet Sun network APPROACH: Use physics-based numerical models to simulate the dynamic.
Stellar Birth Dr. Bill Pezzaglia Astrophysics: Stellar Evolution 1 Updated: 10/02/2006.
DAY 16 September 17, Agenda 1 st RP ‘Stuff’ back Grade Sheets Complete Star Notes Star Concept Map.
Study of the universe (Earth as a planet and beyond)
Proton-proton cycle 3 steps
Astronomy: Stars & Light
The Sun is the largest object in the solar system.
WASP-12.
Black Holes and Neutron Stars
Star Life Cycle Review.
Proxima (TRAPPIST1) Exreme Events
Population synthesis of exoplanets
Prepare your scantron:
Population synthesis of exoplanets
Presentation transcript:

Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften (ÖAW) / Institut für Weltraumforschung (IWF), Graz, Austria, iwf.oeaw.ac.atDownload:2014 We present a numerical method for modeling of the stellar wind interaction and the formation of hydrogen coronae around exoplanets. The method allows multispecies processing. At present it includes neutral hydrogen atoms and hydrogen ions and is based on a Direct Simulation Monte Carlo (DSMC) algorithm (Holmström et al., Nature, 2008). In combination with a hydrodynamic code (Erkaev et al., Astob. 13, 1011, 2013), it allows us to estimate the thermal and non-thermal escape rates from hydrogen-dominated upper atmospheres, including the study on the atmospheric evolution. In combination with observations in Ly- , the algorithm can also be used to estimate the planetary magnetic field strength and various plasma environment properties in the vicinity of an exoplanet. Abstract Stellar wind interaction modelling of exoplanet upper atmospheres K.G. Kislyakova 1, H. Lammer 1, M. Holmström 2, P. Odert 3, M. L. Khodachenko 1 1 IWF/ÖAW, Graz/Austria, 2 IRF, Kiruna/Sweden, 3 IGAM/KFUG, Graz/Austria Ly-  transit study of magnetospheres Code description The code includes the following processes for an exospheric atom:  Collision with an UV photon  Charge-exchange with stellar wind protons  Elastic collision with another hydrogen atom  Ionization by stellar photons or wind electrons  Gravity of the star and planet, Coriolis and tidal forces After the hydrogen cloud is computed, the Ly-  in-transit attenuation of the parent star can be estimated. This allows us to make conclusions about parameters in the upper atmosphere of an exoplanet, its magnetic moment and the stellar wind environment. Coronae modeling Kepler-11 system The DSMC code includes at present two species: neutral hydrogen and hydrogen ions. The code also considers a velocity-dependent radiation pressure. The method allows to model the neutral hydrogen coronae around planets, and the estimation of the ion pick-up escape rates, as well as the calculation of the corresponding Ly-  attenuation of the host star if the observations are available. Activity variations of the host star allows to study the evolution of the atmospheres. The modeling performed for five Kepler-11 “super-Earths” (Fig. 1) indicates the formation of huge hydrogen coronae around these exoplanets. The shape of the clouds is defined by the radiation pressure, charge-exchange and Coriolis force. The nonthermal ion pickup rates are estimated to be in the range which is a few percent of the thermal escape rates (Kislyakova et al., A&A 562, A116, 2014) In combination with a hydrodynamic upper atmosphere code (Erkaev et al., Astrob. 13, 1011, 2013) and the DSCM algorithm we can estimate the thermal and nonthermal ion pick-up escape. According to Lammer et al. (MNRAS 439, 3225, 2014), Erkaev et al. (Astrob. 13, 1011, 2013), Kislyakova et al. (A&A 562, A116, 2014) the thermal escape rates are of more importance during the early XUV active stage of the host star. According to our studies, in the habitable zone of Sun-like stars only planets with masses ≤2 M Earth can rid off their primordial H-He atmospheres and evolve as rocky habitable planets. Fig. 1: Slices of modeled 3D atomic hydrogen coronae around the five Kepler-11 “super-Earths”. Blue and red dots correspond to neutral hydrogen atoms and hydrogen ions, which include stellar wind protons, respectively. The black dot in the center represents the planet. The white empty area around the planet corresponds to the XUV heated, hydrodynamically expanding thermosphere up to the height where Kn=0.1. (Kislyakova et al., A&A 562, A116, 2014) Fig. 4: Sliced of modeled atomic hydrogen coronae around a ”super-Earth” hydrogen-rich planet inside an M star HZ at 0.24 AU. Green: protons, yellow: H atoms, blue: ENAs flying away from the star, red: ENAs flying towards the star; dotted line: magnetopause/planetary obstacle. (Kislyakova et al., Astrob. 13, 1030, 2013) Fig. 2: Slice of modeled 3D atomic hydrogen coronae around the “Hot Jupiter” HD b and the corresponding Ly-  transit spectrum in comparison with the HST observation. (Kislyakova et al., in preparation, 2014) Magnetic moment of an exoplanet defined from stellar wind density and velocity and magneto- spheric stand-off distance (Khodachenko et al., ApJ 744:70, 2012) Fig. 3: Illustration of the protoplanet after the nebula gas dissipation (Lammer et al., MNRAS 439, 3225, 2014) Evolutionary studies