Could CoRoT-7b and Kepler-10b be remnants of evaporated gas or ice giants?
M. Leitzinger(University of Graz), Jean Schneider(Observatoire de Paris), A. Hanslmeier(University of Graz), T. Penz(Austrian Academy of Sciences), J. Weingrill(Austrian Academy of Sciences), H. K. Biernat(Austrian Academy of Sciences), G. Wuchterl, P. Odert(University of Graz), M. L. Khodachenko(Space Research Institute), H. Lammer(Austrian Academy of Sciences), M. G. Guarcello(Osservatorio Astronomico di Palermo), Yu. N. Kulikov(Polar Geophysical Institute), G. Micela(Osservatorio Astronomico di Palermo)
Cited by 44
Related Papers
Atmospheric Loss of Exoplanets Resulting from Stellar X-Ray and Extreme-Ultraviolet Heating
|The Astrophysical Journal|2003|627
Transiting exoplanets from the CoRoT space mission VIII. CoRoT-7b: the first Super-Earth with measured radius
|Scientific Electronic Library Online (São Paulo Research Foundation, Latin American and Caribbean Center on Health Sciences Information, Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico)|2009|381
The XMM-Newton extended survey of the Taurus molecular cloud (XEST)
|Astronomy and Astrophysics|2006|366
Transiting exoplanets from the CoRoT space mission
|Astronomy and Astrophysics|2008|260
The effect of tidal locking on the magnetospheric and atmospheric evolution of “Hot Jupiters”
|Astronomy and Astrophysics|2004|237