294 research outputs found
Rotational Spectral Unmixing of Exoplanets: Degeneracies between Surface Colors and Geography
Unmixing the disk-integrated spectra of exoplanets provides hints about
heterogeneous surfaces that we cannot directly resolve in the foreseeable
future. It is particularly important for terrestrial planets with diverse
surface compositions like Earth. Although previous work on unmixing the spectra
of Earth from disk-integrated multi-band light curves appeared successful, we
point out a mathematical degeneracy between the surface colors and their
spatial distributions. Nevertheless, useful constraints on the spectral shape
of individual surface types may be obtained from the premise that albedo is
everywhere between 0 and 1. We demonstrate the degeneracy and the possible
constraints using both mock data based on a toy model of Earth, as well as real
observations of Earth. Despite the severe degeneracy, we are still able to
recover an approximate albedo spectrum for an ocean. In general, we find that
surfaces are easier to identify when they cover a large fraction of the planet
and when their spectra approach zero or unity in certain bands.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, published in AJ. Minor text updates from
previous versio
Mapping Issues of the Acquisition of L2 Japanese Aspect Markings by Chinese Learners
This paper considers how Chinese learners of Japanese (CLJs) acquire the L2 Japanese aspect marker -teiru in resultative and progressive contexts. It also analyzes the mapping mechanism of the lexical aspect to grammatical markers, with a special focus on achievement and accomplishment verbs. Despite the numerous observations on Chinese aspects (e.g., Dai 2021, Nishizaka 2019, and Sun 2010), only few studies dealt with the issue of acquiring L2 Japanese aspects by L1 Chinese learners. By using the Elicited Acceptability Judgment Test (EAJT) and analyzing the data individually, it was demonstrated that aspect markers corresponding to -teiru are building “one-to-many” rather than “one-to-one” relationships, and CLJs are learning the relationships through mapping while making errors due to other uses
Mapping Earth Analogs from Photometric Variability: Spin-Orbit Tomography for Planets in Inclined Orbits
Aiming at obtaining detailed information of surface environment of Earth
analogs, Kawahara & Fujii (2011) proposed an inversion technique of annual
scattered light curves named the spin-orbit tomography (SOT), which enables one
to sketch a two-dimensional albedo map from annual variation of the
disk-integrated scattered light, and demonstrated the method with a planet in a
face-on orbit. We extend it to be applicable to general geometric
configurations, including low-obliquity planets like the Earth in inclined
orbits. We simulate light curves of the Earth in an inclined orbit in three
photometric bands (0.4-0.5um, 0.6-0.7um, and 0.8-0.9um) and show that the
distribution of clouds, snow, and continents is retrieved with the aid of the
SOT. We also demonstrate the SOT by applying it to an upright Earth, a tidally
locked Earth, and Earth analogs with ancient continental configurations. The
inversion is model independent in the sense that we do not assume specific
albedo models when mapping the surface, and hence applicable in principle to
any kind of inhomogeneity. This method can potentially serve as a unique tool
to investigate the exohabitats/exoclimes of Earth analogs.Comment: 15 pages, 14 figures, 2 tables; published in The Astrophysical
Journa
Global Mapping of Earth-like Exoplanets from Scattered Light Curves
Scattered lights from terrestrial exoplanets provide valuable information
about the planetary surface. Applying the surface reconstruction method
proposed by Fujii et al. (2010) to both diurnal and annual variations of the
scattered light, we develop a reconstruction method of land distribution with
both longitudinal and latitudinal resolutions. We find that one can recover a
global map of an idealized Earth-like planet on the following assumptions: 1)
cloudless, 2) a face-on circular orbit, 3) known surface types and their
reflectance spectra 4) no atmospheric absorption, 5) known rotation rate 6)
static map, and 7) no moon. Using the dependence of light curves on the
planetary obliquity, we also show that the obliquity can be measured by
adopting the chi-square minimization or the extended information criterion. We
demonstrate a feasibility of our methodology by applying it to a multi-band
photometry of a cloudless model Earth with future space missions such as the
occulting ozone observatory (O3). We conclude that future space missions can
estimate both the surface distribution and the obliquity at least for cloudless
Earth-like planets within 5 pc.Comment: 20 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
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