4.7 Article

Dust formation in the outflows of catastrophically evaporating planets

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 518, Issue 2, Pages 1761-1775

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stac3121

Keywords

planets and satellites: atmospheres; planets and satellites: surfaces

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Ultrashort period planets provide insights into exoplanets' interior through observing the material evaporated from their rocky interiors. Disintegrating planets with dusty tails, believed to originate from dust condensation in thermally driven winds, have highly variable nature. New radiation-hydrodynamic simulations show that dust forms readily in the winds and the coupling of temperature and dust's opacity can drive time-variable flows. These dusty tails are a signature of catastrophically evaporating planets close to the end of their lives.
Ultrashort period planets offer a window into the poorly understood interior composition of exoplanets through material evaporated from their rocky interiors. Among these objects are a class of disintegrating planets, observed when their dusty tails transit in front of their host stars. These dusty tails are thought to originate from dust condensation in thermally driven winds emanating from the sublimating surfaces of these planets. Existing models of these winds have been unable to explain their highly variable nature and have not explicitly modelled how dust forms in the wind. Here, we present new radiation-hydrodynamic simulations of the winds from these planets, including a minimal model for the formation and destruction of dust, assuming that nucleation can readily take place. We find that dust forms readily in the winds, a consequence of large dust grains obtaining lower temperatures than the planet's surface. As hyphothesized previously, we find that the coupling of the planet's surface temperature to the outflow properties via the dust's opacity can drive time-variable flows when dust condensation is sufficiently fast. In agreement with previous work, our models suggest that these dusty tails are a signature of catastrophically evaporating planets that are close to the end of their lives. Finally, we discuss the implications of our results for the dust's composition. More detailed hydrodynamic models that self-consistently compute the nucleation and composition of the dust and gas are warranted in order to use these models to study the planet's interior composition.

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