The NUV transit of XO-3 b
Raven Cilley, Lia Corrales, George W. King, Jiayin Dong, Robert Frazier + 6 more
TLDR
This paper analyzes NUV and optical transits of exoplanet XO-3 b, finding a deeper NUV transit and a significant NUV transit timing offset.
Key contributions
- Measured XO-3 b's NUV transit depth as 30-70% deeper than optical, using XMM-Newton and TESS data.
- Discovered the NUV transit center is 22 minutes late compared to the optical ephemeris, despite no optical TTVs.
- First-time characterization of XO-3's X-ray luminosity, revealing an extremely low atmospheric mass-loss rate.
- Analytic models for an NUV-absorbent bow-shock predict an early, not late, transit, highlighting simulation needs.
Why it matters
This study provides crucial insights into the complex atmospheric dynamics of hot Jupiters, particularly regarding NUV absorption and transit timing variations. The findings challenge current understanding of atmospheric escape and planetary magnetic fields, emphasizing the need for advanced simulations.
Original Abstract
Near-UV (NUV) measurements of exoplanet transits offer a means to probe atmospheric escape, cloud formation, and planetary magnetic fields. We examine a 2024 XMM-Newton Optical Monitor NUV observation of the transit of XO-3~b, a massive hot Jupiter on an eccentric orbit with a previously observed abnormally large NUV-absorbing atmosphere. We analyze this NUV data jointly with a concurrent ground-based optical observation and all TESS transit observations, and find a NUV transit depth of $R_{p,NUV}/R_{\star} = 0.1371^{+0.016}_{-0.019}$, which is 30-70% deeper than the optical transit. Although the optical transits do not show signs of transit timing variations, the transit center in the NUV is $22^{+13}_{-11}$ minutes late compared to the optical ephemeris. We investigate atmospheric escape as a potential explanation of the properties of this NUV transit by examining X-ray data from XMM-Newton, characterizing the X-ray luminosity of XO-3 for the first time and estimating an extremely small mass-loss rate of $\sim10^4$ g/s ($\sim10^{-19}$ M$_{\text{jup}}$/yr). Finally, we investigate the likelihood of an NUV-absorbent bow-shock by estimating the magnetic field of the planet. While such a mechanism is capable of producing NUV transit offsets on the order of tens of minutes, our analytic approximations predict an early rather than late transit, indicating a need for further magnetohydrodynamic simulations.
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