Redshifted Sodium Transient near Exoplanet Transit
Neutral sodium (Na I) is an alkali metal with a favorable absorption cross section such that tenuous gases are easily illuminated at select transiting exoplanet systems. We examine both the time-averaged and time-series alkali spectral flux individually, over 4 nights at a hot Saturn system on a $\s...
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
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Format: | Journal Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
29-09-2024
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Neutral sodium (Na I) is an alkali metal with a favorable absorption cross
section such that tenuous gases are easily illuminated at select transiting
exoplanet systems. We examine both the time-averaged and time-series alkali
spectral flux individually, over 4 nights at a hot Saturn system on a $\sim$
2.8 day orbit about a Sun-like star WASP-49 A. Very Large Telescope/ESPRESSO
observations are analyzed, providing new constraints. We recover the previously
confirmed residual sodium flux uniquely when averaged, whereas night-to-night
Na I varies by more than an order of magnitude. On HARPS/3.6-m Epoch II, we
report a Doppler redshift at $v_{ \Gamma, \mathrm{NaD}} =$ +9.7 $\pm$ 1.6 km/s
with respect to the planet's rest frame. Upon examining the lightcurves, we
confirm night-to-night variability, on the order of $\sim$ 1-4 % in NaD rarely
coinciding with exoplanet transit, not readily explained by stellar activity,
starspots, tellurics, or the interstellar medium. Coincident with the $\sim$+10
km/s Doppler redshift, we detect a transient sodium absorption event
dF$_{\mathrm{NaD}}$/F$_{\star}$ = 3.6 $\pm$ 1 % at a relative difference of
$\Delta F_{\mathrm{NaD}} (t) \sim$ 4.4 $\pm$ 1 %, enduring $\Delta
t_{\mathrm{NaD}} \gtrsim$ 40 minutes. Since exoplanetary alkali signatures are
blueshifted due to the natural vector of radiation pressure, estimated here at
roughly $\sim$ -5.7 km/s, the radial velocity is rather at +15.4 km/s, far
larger than any known exoplanet system. Given that the redshift magnitude
v$_{\Gamma}$ is in between the Roche limit and dynamically stable satellite
orbits, the transient sodium may be a putative indication of a natural
satellite orbiting WASP-49 A b. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2409.19844 |