The effect of evaporation on the evolution of close-in giant planets

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Authors
Baraffe, Isabelle
Selsis, Franck
Chabrier, Gilles
Barman, Travis S.
Allard, France
Hauschildt, Peter H.
Lammer, Helmut
Advisors
Issue Date
2004-05-03
Type
Article
Keywords
Planetary Systems , Stars: Individual: Hd 209458, Ogle-tr-56 , Earth Atmosphere , Evaporation , Mathematical Models , Natural Resources Exploration , Probability , Thermal Effects , Ultraviolet Radiation , Hd 209458 , Ogle-tr-56 , Stars , Planets
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Citation
The effect of evaporation on the evolution of close-in giant planets I. Baraffe, F. Selsis, G. Chabrier, T. S. Barman, F. Allard, P. H. Hauschildt and H. Lammer A&A, 419 2 (2004) L13-L16 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361:20040129
Abstract

We include the effect of evaporation in our evolutionary calculations of close-in giant planets, based on a recent model for thermal evaporation taking into account the XUV flux of the parent star (Lammer et al. 2003). Our analysis leads to the existence of a critical mass for a given orbital distance m crit(a) below which the evaporation timescale becomes shorter than the thermal timescale of the planet. For planets with initial masses below mcrit, evaporation leads to a rapid expansion of the outer layers and of the total planetary radius, speeding up the evaporation process. Consequently, the planet does not survive as long as estimated by a simple application of mass loss rates without following consistently its evolution. We find out that the transit planet HD 209458b might be in such a dramatic phase, although with an extremely small probability. As a consequence, we predict that, after a certain time, only planets above a value mcrit(a) should be present at an orbital distance a of a star. For planets with initial masses above mcrit, evaporation does not affect the evolution of the radius with time. © 2008 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.

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This is an open access article under the CC BY license.
Publisher
EDP Sciences
Journal
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Book Title
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PubMed ID
ISSN
0004-6361
1432-0746
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