410 research outputs found
The astrophysics of visible-light orbital phase curves in the space age
The field of visible-light continuous time series photometry is now at its
golden age, manifested by the continuum of past (CoRoT, Kepler), present (K2),
and future (TESS, PLATO) space-based surveys delivering high precision data
with a long baseline for a large number of stars. The availability of the high
quality data has enabled astrophysical studies not possible before, including
for example detailed asteroseismic investigations and the study of the
exoplanet census including small planets. This has also allowed to study the
minute photometric variability following the orbital motion in stellar binaries
and star-planet systems which is the subject of this review. We focus on
systems with a main sequence primary and a low-mass secondary, from a small
star to a massive planet. The orbital modulations are induced by a combination
of gravitational and atmospheric processes, including the beaming effect, tidal
ellipsoidal distortion, reflected light, and thermal emission. Therefore, the
phase curve shape contains information about the companion's mass and
atmospheric characteristics, making phase curves a useful astrophysical tool.
For example, phase curves can be used to detect and measure the mass of
short-period low-mass companions orbiting hot fast-rotating stars, out of reach
of other detection methods. Another interesting application of phase curves is
using the orbital phase modulations to look for non-transiting systems, which
comprise the majority of stellar binary and star-planet systems. We discuss the
science done with phase curves, the first results obtained so far, and the
current difficulties and open questions related to this young and evolving
subfield.Comment: Invited Review accepted to PAS
Studying atmosphere-dominated hot Jupiter Kepler phase curves: Evidence that inhomogeneous atmospheric reflection is common
(abridged) We identify 3 Kepler transiting planets, Kepler-7b, Kepler-12b,
and Kepler-41b, whose orbital phase-folded light curves are dominated by
planetary atmospheric processes including thermal emission and reflected light,
while the impact of non-atmospheric (i.e. gravitational) processes, including
beaming (Doppler boosting) and tidal ellipsoidal distortion, is negligible.
Therefore, those systems allow a direct view of their atmospheres without being
hampered by the approximations used in the inclusion of both atmospheric and
non-atmospheric processes when modeling the phase curve shape. Here we analyze
Kepler-12b and Kepler-41b atmosphere based on their Kepler phase curve, while
the analysis of Kepler-7b was presented elsewhere. The model we used
efficiently computes reflection and thermal emission contributions to the phase
curve, including inhomogeneous atmospheric reflection due to longitudinally
varying cloud coverage. We confirm Kepler-12b and Kepler-41b show a westward
phase shift between the brightest region on the planetary surface and the
substellar point, similar to Kepler-7b. We find that reflective clouds located
on the west side of the substellar point can explain the phase shift. The
existence of inhomogeneous atmospheric reflection in all 3 of our targets,
selected due to their atmosphere-dominated Kepler phase curve, suggests this
phenomenon is common. Therefore it is likely to be present also in planetary
phase curves that do not allow a direct view of the planetary atmosphere as
they contain additional orbital processes. We discuss the implications of a
bright-spot shift on the analysis of phase curves where both atmospheric and
gravitational processes appear. We also discuss the potential detection of
non-transiting but otherwise similar planets, whose mass is too small to show a
gravitational photometric signal but their atmospheric signal is detectable.Comment: V2: Replaced with accepted version, Appendix B Figures 1 and 2 are in
decreased resolutio
Time variation of Kepler transits induced by stellar rotating spots - a way to distinguish between prograde and retrograde motion I. Theory
Some transiting planets discovered by the Kepler mission display transit
timing variations (TTVs) induced by stellar spots that rotate on the visible
hemisphere of their parent stars. An induced TTV can be observed when a planet
crosses a spot and modifies the shape of the transit light curve, even if the
time resolution of the data does not allow to detect the crossing event itself.
We present an approach that can, in some cases, use the derived TTVs of a
planet to distinguish between a prograde and a retrograde planetary motion with
respect to the stellar rotation. Assuming a single spot darker than the stellar
disc, spot crossing by the planet can induce measured positive (negative) TTV,
if the crossing occurs in the first (second) half of the transit. On the other
hand, the motion of the spot towards (away from) the center of the stellar
visible disc causes the stellar brightness to decrease (increase). Therefore,
for a planet with prograde motion, the induced TTV is positive when the local
slope of the stellar flux at the time of transit is negative, and vice versa.
Thus, we can expect to observe a negative (positive) correlation between the
TTVs and the photometric slopes for prograde (retrograde) motion. Using a
simplistic analytical approximation, and also the publicly available SOAP-T
tool to produce light curves of transits with spot-crossing events, we show for
some cases how the induced TTVs depend on the local stellar photometric slopes
at the transit timings. Detecting this correlation in Kepler transiting systems
with high enough signal-to-noise ratio can allow us to distinguish between
prograde and retrograde planetary motions. In coming papers we present analyses
of the KOIs and Kepler eclipsing binaries, following the formalism developed
here.Comment: V2: Major revision, accepted to Ap
A Search for Temporal Atmospheric Variability of Kepler Hot Jupiters
We perform a systematic search for atmospheric variability in short-period
gas-giant planets (hot Jupiters) observed by the Kepler mission, by looking for
temporal variability of their secondary eclipse depths. This is motivated by a
recent detection of a decrease in the dayside brightness of KELT-1 b between
TESS Sectors 17 and 57, separated by about 3 years. We fit the Kepler light
curves of 53 hot Jupiters and measure their secondary eclipse depths during
individual Kepler quarters and 4-quarter windows. We detect the secondary
eclipses in individual quarters or four-quarter windows for 17 out of the 53
systems. In those 17 systems we do not detect statistically significant
astrophysical variation in the secondary eclipse depths. We show that the data
is sensitive to the variability seen for KELT-1 b in TESS data. Therefore, the
absence of detected secondary eclipse variability in Kepler data suggests that
the atmospheric variability in KELT-1 b is not common. In addition, several of
the 53 targets we investigated display variability in their transit depths with
a period of 4 quarters (1 year). This instrumental signal is likely present in
the light curves of other transiting planets we did not analyze and other
variable stars observed by Kepler. Finally, we find that Kepler-488 b has a
secondary eclipse depth that is unphysically large for a planet, and thus is
likely a misclassified red dwarf.Comment: Submitted to AJ. 14 pages, 5 figures. Posted on arXiv for comments
from the communit
Photopolarimetric Characteristics of Brown Dwarfs. I. Uniform Cloud Decks
This work is a theoretical exploration facilitating the interpretation of polarimetric observations in terms of cloudiness, rotational velocities, and effective temperatures of brown dwarfs (BDs). An envelope of scatterers like free electrons, atoms/molecules, or haze/clouds affects the Stokes vector of the radiation emitted by oblate bodies. Due to high rotation rates, BDs can be considerably oblate. We present a conics-based radiative transfer scheme for computing the disk-resolved and disk-integrated polarized emission of an oblate BD or extrasolar giant planet bearing homogeneous or patchy clouds. Assuming a uniform gray atmosphere, we theoretically examine the sensitivity of photopolarimetry to the atmosphere's scattering properties, like cloud optical thickness and grain size, concurrently with BD properties, like oblateness, inclination, and effective temperature, which are all treated as free parameters. Additionally, we examine the potential effects of gravitational darkening (GD), revealing that it could significantly amplify disk-integrated polarization. GD imparts a nonlinear inverse temperature dependence to the resulting polarization. Photopolarimetric observations are sensitive to oblateness and inclination. The degree of polarization increases in response to both, making it potentially useful for assessing the spatial orientation of the BD. Under our model assumptions, increasing droplet size in optically thick clouds causes a blueward shift in the near-infrared colors of BDs, which is interesting in light of the observed J – K brightening in the L/T transition. For large cloud grains, polarization decreases sharply, while the transmitted intensity shows a steady increase. BD polarization is thus a potential indicator not only of the presence of clouds but also provides information on cloud grain size
Kepler-47: A Transiting Circumbinary Multiplanet System
We report the detection of Kepler-47, a system consisting of two planets orbiting around an eclipsing pair of stars. The inner and outer planets have radii 3.0 and 4.6 times that of Earth, respectively. The binary star consists of a Sun-like star and a companion roughly one-third its size, orbiting each other every 7.45 days. With an orbital period of 49.5 days, 18 transits of the inner planet have been observed, allowing a detailed characterization of its orbit and those of the stars. The outer planet’s orbital period is 303.2 days, and although the planet is not Earth-like, it resides within the classical "habitable zone," where liquid water could exist on an Earth-like planet. With its two known planets, Kepler-47 establishes that close binary stars can host complete planetary systems
Accelerated Tidal Circularization Via Resonance Locking in KIC 8164262
Tidal dissipation in binary star and planetary systems is poorly understood.
Fortunately, eccentric binaries known as heartbeat stars often exhibit tidally
excited oscillations, providing observable diagnostics of tidal circularization
mechanisms and timescales. We apply tidal theories to observations of the
heartbeat star KIC 8164262, which contains an F-type primary in a very
eccentric orbit that exhibits a prominent tidally excited oscillation. We
demonstrate that the prominent oscillation is unlikely to result from a chance
resonance between tidal forcing and a stellar oscillation mode. However, the
oscillation has a frequency and amplitude consistent with the prediction of
resonance locking, a mechanism in which coupled stellar and orbital evolution
maintain a stable resonance between tidal forcing and a stellar oscillation
mode. The resonantly excited mode produces efficient tidal dissipation
(corresponding to an effective tidal quality factor ),
such that tidal orbital decay/circularization proceeds on a stellar evolution
time scale.Comment: Published in MNRAS Letters. For an interactive 3D model of the
system, go to
http://www.glowscript.org/#/user/slantburns/folder/Public/program/KIC816426
The Pseudosynchronization of Binary Stars Undergoing Strong Tidal Interactions
Eccentric binaries known as heartbeat stars experience strong dynamical tides
as the stars pass through periastron, providing a laboratory to study tidal
interactions. We measure the rotation periods of 24 heartbeat systems, using
the Kepler light curves to identify rotation peaks in the Fourier transform.
Where possible, we compare the rotation period to the pseudosynchronization
period derived by Hut 1981. Few of our heartbeat stars are pseudosynchronized
with the orbital period. For four systems, we were able to identify two sets of
rotation peaks, which we interpret as the rotation from both stars in the
binary. The majority of the systems have a rotation period that is
approximately 3/2 times the pseudosynchronization period predicted by Hut 1981,
suggesting that other physical mechanisms influence the stars' rotation, or
that stars typically reach tidal spin equilibrium at a rotation period slightly
longer than predicted.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, 1 table
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