Using helium 10830 transits to constrain planetary magnetic fields

Abstract

Planetary magnetic fields can affect the predicted mass loss rate for close-in planets that experience large amounts of UV irradiation. In this work, we present a method to detect the magnetic fields of close-in exoplanets undergoing atmospheric escape using transit spectroscopy at the 10830 Angstrom line of helium. Motivated by previous work on hydrodynamic and magneto-hydrodynamic photoevaporation, we suggest that planets with magnetic fields that are too weak to control the outflow's topology lead to blue-shifted transits due to day-to-night-side flows. In contrast, strong magnetic fields prevent this day-to-night flow, as the gas is forced to follow the magnetic field's roughly dipolar topology. We post-process existing 2D photoevaporation simulations to test this concept, computing synthetic transit profiles in helium. As expected, we find that hydrodynamically dominated outflows lead to blue-shifted transits on the order of the sound speed of the gas. Strong surface magnetic fields lead to unshifted or slightly red-shifted transit profiles. High-resolution observations can distinguish between these profiles; however, eccentricity uncertainties generally mean that we cannot conclusively say velocity shifts are due to the outflow for individual planets. The majority of helium observations are blue-shifted, which could be a tentative indication that close-in planets generally have surface dipole magnetic field strengths 0.1 gauss. More 3D hydrodynamic and magneto-hydrodynamic are needed to confirm this conclusion robustly.

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