Artículo de revista
SALT observations of the chromospheric activity of transiting planet hosts: Mass-loss and star-planet interactions
Fecha
2017Registro en:
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volumen 466, Issue 1, 2017, Pages 738-748
13652966
00358711
10.1093/mnras/stw3172
Autor
Staab, D.
Haswell, C. A.
Smith, Gareth D.
Fossati, L.
Barnes, J. R.
Busuttil, R.
Jenkins, James Stewart
Institución
Resumen
We measured the chromospheric activity of the four hot Jupiter hosts WASP-43, WASP-51/HAT-P-30, WASP-72 and WASP-103 to search for anomalous values caused by the close-in companions. The Mount Wilson CaIIH&KS-index was calculated for each star usingobservations taken with the Robert Stobie Spectrograph at the Southern African Large Tele-scope. The activity level of WASP-43 is anomalously high relative to its age and falls amongthe highest values of all known main-sequence stars. We found marginal evidence that theactivity of WASP-103 is also higher than expected from the system age. We suggest that forWASP-43 and WASP-103 star–planet interactions (SPI) may enhance the CaIIH&Kcoreemission. The activity levels of WASP-51/HAT-P-30 and WASP-72 are anomalously low,with the latter falling below the basal envelope for both main-sequence and evolved stars. Thiscan be attributed to circumstellar absorption due to planetary mass-loss, though absorption inthe interstellar medium may contribute. A quarter of known short-period planet hosts exhibitanomalously low activity levels, including systems with hot Jupiters and low-mass compan-ions. Since SPI can elevate and absorption can suppress the observed chromospheric activityof stars with close-in planets, their CaIIH & K activity levels are an unreliable age indicator.Systems where the activity is depressed by absorption from planetary mass-loss are key targetsfor examining planet compositions through transmission spectroscopy.