4.7 Article

Exoplanets as probes of the winds of host stars: the case of the M dwarf GJ 436

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 470, Issue 4, Pages 4026-4033

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stx1543

Keywords

stars: individual: GJ 436; stars: low-mass; stars: winds, outflows; planetary systems

Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF)
  2. SNSF

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Winds of cool dwarfs are difficult to observe, with only a few M dwarfs presenting observationally derived mass-loss rates (M), which span several orders of magnitude. Close-in exoplanets are conveniently positioned in the inner regions of stellar winds and can, thus, be used to probe the otherwise-unobservable local properties of their host-stars' winds. Here, we use local stellar wind characteristics observationally derived in the studies of atmospheric evaporation of the warm-neptune GJ 436b to derive the global characteristics of the wind of its M-dwarf host. Using an isothermal wind model, we constrain the stellar wind temperature to be in the range (0.36-0.43) MK, with M = (0.5 -2.5) x 10(-15) M circle dot yr(-1) . By computing the pressure balance between the stellar wind and the interstellar medium, we derive the size of the astrophere of GJ 436 to be around 25 au, significantly more compact than the heliosphere. We demonstrate in this paper that transmission spectroscopy, coupled to planetary atmospheric evaporation and stellar wind models, can be a useful tool for constraining the large-scale wind structure of planet-hosting stars. Extending our approach to future planetary systems discoveries will open new perspectives for the combined characterization of planetary exospheres and winds of cool dwarf stars.

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