Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2248/8581
Title: Redshifted sodium transient near exoplanet transit
Authors: Oza, Apurva V
Seidel, Julia V
Hoeijmakers, H. Jens
Unni, Athira
Kesseli, Aurora Y
Schmid, Carl A
Sivarani, T
Bello-Arufe, Aaron
Gebek, Andrea
Moritz Meyer zu, Westram
Sousa, S. G
Lopes, Rosaly M. C
Hu, Renyu
Kleer, Katherine de
Fisher, Chloe
Charnoz, Sebastien
Baker, Ashley D
Halverson, Sam
Schneider, Nick M
Psaridi, Angelica
Wyttenbach, Aurelien
Torres, Santiago
Bhatnagar, Ishita
Johnson, Robert E
Keywords: Natural satellites (Extrasolar)
Exoplanet astronomy
Transmission spectroscopy
Radial velocity
Doppler shift
Issue Date: 1-Oct-2024
Publisher: American Astronomical Society
Citation: The Astrophysical Journal Letters, Vol. 973, No. 2. L53
Abstract: 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 ∼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 vΓ,NaD = + 9.7 ± 1.6 km s−1 with respect to the planet's rest frame. Upon examining the lightcurves, we confirm night-to-night variability, on the order of ∼1%–4% in NaD, rarely coinciding with exoplanet transit, not readily explained by stellar activity, starspots, tellurics, or the interstellar medium. Coincident with the ∼+10 km s−1 Doppler redshift, we detect a transient sodium absorption event dFNaD/F⋆ = 3.6% ± 1% at a relative difference of ΔFNaD(t) ∼ 4.4% ± 1%, lasting ΔtNaD ≳ 40 minutes. Since exoplanetary alkali signatures are blueshifted due to the natural vector of radiation pressure, estimated here at roughly ∼−5.7 km s−1, the radial velocity is rather at +15.4 km s−1, far larger than any known exoplanet system. Given that the redshift magnitude vΓ 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.
Description: Open Access
Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 licence. Any further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation and DOI
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2248/8581
ISSN: 2041-8213
Appears in Collections:IIAP Publications

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