Published December 13, 2023 | Version v1
Dataset Open

HPF data for "A Large and Variable Leading Tail of Helium in a Hot Saturn Undergoing Runaway Inflation"

Description

Data from the Habitable Zone Planet Finder (HPF) Spectrograph at McDonald Observatory, in the form of high resolution infrared echelle spectra.  The target is HAT-P-67, a planet host star.  The spectra were acquired by Queue observations with the Hobby Eberly Telescope in the period 2020-2022.  The data were reduced with the "Goldilocks" pipeline.  The full dataset is described in detail in the paper "A Large and Variable Leading Tail of Helium in a Hot Saturn Undergoing Runaway Inflation".  

The abstract for that paper is reproduced below:

Atmospheric escape shapes the fate of exoplanets, with statistical evidence for transformative mass loss imprinted across the mass-radius-insolation distribution. Here we present transit spectroscopy of the highly irradiated, low-gravity, inflated hot Saturn HAT-P-67 b. The Habitable Zone Planet Finder (HPF) spectra show a detection of up to 10% absorption depth of the 10833 Angstrom Helium triplet. The 13.8 hours of on-sky integration time over 39 nights sample the entire planet orbit, uncovering excess Helium absorption preceding the transit by up to 130 planetary radii in a large leading tail. This configuration can be understood as the escaping material overflowing its small Roche lobe and advecting most of the gas into the stellar---and not planetary---rest frame, consistent with the Doppler velocity structure seen in the Helium line profiles. The prominent leading tail serves as direct evidence for dayside mass loss with a strong day-/night- side asymmetry. We see some transit-to-transit variability in the line profile, consistent with the interplay of stellar and planetary winds. We employ 1D Parker wind models to estimate the mass loss rate, finding values on the order of 2x10^13 g/s, with large uncertainties owing to the unknown XUV flux of the F host star. The large mass loss in HAT-P-67 b represents a valuable example of an inflated hot Saturn, a class of planets recently identified to be rare as their atmospheres are predicted to evaporate quickly. We contrast two physical mechanisms for runaway evaporation: Ohmic dissipation and XUV irradiation, slightly favoring the latter.

Files

HAT_P_67_glks.zip

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Additional details

Related works

Is referenced by
Preprint: arXiv:2307.08959 (arXiv)

Funding

Observing Helium Outflows from Irradiated Exoplanets with the Hobby-Eberly Telescope 80NSSC20K0257
NASA Shared Services Center