| Literature DB >> 29720632 |
J J Spake1, D K Sing2,3, T M Evans2, A Oklopčić4, V Bourrier5, L Kreidberg6,7, B V Rackham8, J Irwin7, D Ehrenreich5, A Wyttenbach5, H R Wakeford9, Y Zhou8, K L Chubb10, N Nikolov2, J M Goyal2, G W Henry11, M H Williamson11, S Blumenthal2, D R Anderson12, C Hellier13, D Charbonneau7, S Udry5, N Madhusudhan12.
Abstract
Helium is the second-most abundant element in the Universe after hydrogen and is one of the main constituents of gas-giant planets in our Solar System. Early theoretical models predicted helium to be among the most readily detectable species in the atmospheres of exoplanets, especially in extended and escaping atmospheres 1 . Searches for helium, however, have hitherto been unsuccessful 2 . Here we report observations of helium on an exoplanet, at a confidence level of 4.5 standard deviations. We measured the near-infrared transmission spectrum of the warm gas giant 3 WASP-107b and identified the narrow absorption feature of excited metastable helium at 10,833 angstroms. The amplitude of the feature, in transit depth, is 0.049 ± 0.011 per cent in a bandpass of 98 angstroms, which is more than five times greater than what could be caused by nominal stellar chromospheric activity. This large absorption signal suggests that WASP-107b has an extended atmosphere that is eroding at a total rate of 1010 to 3 × 1011 grams per second (0.1-4 per cent of its total mass per billion years), and may have a comet-like tail of gas shaped by radiation pressure.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29720632 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-018-0067-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962