日本地球惑星科学連合2024年大会

講演情報

[E] 口頭発表

セッション記号 P (宇宙惑星科学) » P-CG 宇宙惑星科学複合領域・一般

[P-CG19] 系外惑星

2024年5月28日(火) 13:45 〜 15:15 102 (幕張メッセ国際会議場)

コンビーナ:小玉 貴則(地球生命研究所、東京工業大学)、野津 翔太(東京大学 大学院理学系研究科 地球惑星科学専攻 地球惑星システム科学講座)、川島 由依(東北大学)、森 万由子(東京大学)、座長:伊藤 祐一(国立天文台、科学研究部)、吉田 辰哉(東北大学)


13:45 〜 14:15

[PCG19-12] On the Physics of Atmospheric Escape

★Invited Papers

*Antonio Garcia Munoz1 (1.CEA Paris-Saclay)

キーワード:Exoplanets, Atmospheres, Escape, Radiation, Solar system

The evolution of a planet is partly dictated by how much of its atmosphere is lost to space over timescales of Gyears. Considerations of this type have been fundamental to retrace the history since formation of the solar system planets. The discovery in the last three decades of more than 5000 exoplanets, many of them with masses and sizes (and presumably compositions) very unlike those of the solar system planets, has brought atmospheric escape back onto the spotlight. Conveniently, many close-in exoplanets are losing their atmospheres in ways that can be probed as it occurs through a variety of diagnostic spectral lines. Our understanding of planet evolution depends strongly on the connection between such observations and the complex physics that occurs at high altitude in the atmospheres, and for which we often lack any other information. Establishing this connection in a physically-motivated way is particularly timely as a new generation of telescopes and instruments is enabling the characterization of ever smaller exoplanets susceptible to catastrophic mass loss. This review will cover the physical principles of atmospheric escape and how they are affected by both the planet and stellar properties. I will discuss the main diagnostic lines that are used to probe atmospheric escape from H/He-dominated atmospheres with space-borne telescopes (typically, far-ultraviolet lines that include H I Lyman-α, resonance lines of O I and C II, and lines of heavier metals such as Mg and Fe) and with ground-based telescopes (more prominently, lines in the Balmer and Paschen series of H I, and the He I triplet at 1.08 μm). I will elaborate on the significance of these detections to constrain the dynamics and energy budget of the low-density atmospheres, and touch upon concepts such as chemical disequilibrium, opacity and mass fractionation. I will then use these ideas to delve into the more complex problem of atmospheric escape from non-H/He-dominated atmospheres, which are notably more challenging to characterize observationally. For them, the presence of e.g. H2O or CO2 molecules introduces new possibilities such as non-local-thermodynamic equilibrium in rovibrational bands that may affect the energy budget and therefore the long-term stability of the atmospheres. I will finish the review with a perspective of where we stand “model-wise”, and how we can benefit from other astrophysical fields, and what we can expect to learn about atmospheric escape and planetary evolution in general from ongoing and future observational surveys.