106 research outputs found
Model atmospheres of irradiated exoplanets: The influence of stellar parameters, metallicity, and the C/O ratio
Many parameters constraining the spectral appearance of exoplanets are still
poorly understood. We therefore study the properties of irradiated exoplanet
atmospheres over a wide parameter range including metallicity, C/O ratio and
host spectral type. We calculate a grid of 1-d radiative-convective atmospheres
and emission spectra. We perform the calculations with our new
Pressure-Temperature Iterator and Spectral Emission Calculator for Planetary
Atmospheres (PETIT) code, assuming chemical equilibrium. The atmospheric
structures and spectra are made available online. We find that atmospheres of
planets with C/O ratios 1 and 1500 K can exhibit
inversions due to heating by the alkalis because the main coolants CH,
HO and HCN are depleted. Therefore, temperature inversions possibly occur
without the presence of additional absorbers like TiO and VO. At low
temperatures we find that the pressure level of the photosphere strongly
influences whether the atmospheric opacity is dominated by either water (for
low C/O) or methane (for high C/O), or both (regardless of the C/O). For hot,
carbon-rich objects this pressure level governs whether the atmosphere is
dominated by methane or HCN. Further we find that host stars of late spectral
type lead to planetary atmospheres which have shallower, more isothermal
temperature profiles. In agreement with prior work we find that for planets
with 1750 K the transition between water or methane dominated
spectra occurs at C/O 0.7, instead of 1, because condensation
preferentially removes oxygen.Comment: 30 pages, 20 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
Planetary population synthesis coupled with atmospheric escape: a statistical view of evaporation
We apply hydrodynamic evaporation models to different synthetic planet
populations that were obtained from a planet formation code based on a
core-accretion paradigm. We investigated the evolution of the planet
populations using several evaporation models, which are distinguished by the
driving force of the escape flow (X-ray or EUV), the heating efficiency in
energy-limited evaporation regimes, or both. Although the mass distribution of
the planet populations is barely affected by evaporation, the radius
distribution clearly shows a break at approximately 2 . We find
that evaporation can lead to a bimodal distribution of planetary sizes (Owen &
Wu 2013) and to an "evaporation valley" running diagonally downwards in the
orbital distance - planetary radius plane, separating bare cores from low-mass
planet that have kept some primordial H/He. Furthermore, this bimodal
distribution is related to the initial characteristics of the planetary
populations because low-mass planetary cores can only accrete small primordial
H/He envelopes and their envelope masses are proportional to their core masses.
We also find that the population-wide effect of evaporation is not sensitive to
the heating efficiency of energy-limited description. However, in two extreme
cases, namely without evaporation or with a 100\% heating efficiency in an
evaporation model, the final size distributions show significant differences;
these two scenarios can be ruled out from the size distribution of
candidates.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ; 24 pages, 16 figure
Observed spectral energy distribution of the thermal emission from the dayside of WASP-46b
We aim to construct a spectral energy distribution (SED) for the emission
from the dayside atmosphere of the hot Jupiter WASP-46b and to investigate its
energy budget. We observed a secondary eclipse of WASP-46b simultaneously in
the g'r'i'z'JHK bands using the GROND instrument on the MPG/ESO 2.2m telescope.
Eclipse depths of the acquired light curves were derived to infer the
brightness temperatures at multibands that cover the SED peak. We report the
first detection of the thermal emission from the dayside of WASP-46b in the K
band at 4.2-sigma level and tentative detections in the H (2.5-sigma) and J
(2.3-sigma) bands, with flux ratios of 0.253 +0.063/-0.060%, 0.194 +/- 0.078%,
and 0.129 +/- 0.055%, respectively. The derived brightness temperatures (2306
+177/-187K, 2462 +245/-302K, and 2453 +198/-258K, respectively) are consistent
with an isothermal temperature profile of 2386K, which is significantly higher
than the dayside-averaged equilibrium temperature, indicative of very poor heat
redistribution efficiency. We also investigate the tentative detections in the
g'r'i' bands and the 3-sigma upper limit in the z' band, which might indicate
the existence of reflective clouds if these tentative detections do not arise
from systematics.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in A&
On the massive young stellar object AFGL4176: High-spatial-resolution multi-wavelength observations and modeling
Deeply embedded and at distances of several kiloparsecs, massive young
stellar objects (MYSOs) present numerous challenges for observation and study.
In this work, we present spatially-resolved observations of one MYSO, AFGL
4176, together with survey and literature data, ranging from interferometric
observations with VLTI/MIDI in the mid-infrared, to single-dish Herschel
measurements in the far-infrared, and sub-millimeter data from APEX. We
consider this spatially-resolved, multi-wavelength data set in terms of both
radiative transfer and geometric models. We find that the observations are well
described by one-dimensional models overall, but there are also substantial
deviations from spherical symmetry at scales of tens to hundreds of
astronomical units, which are revealed by the mid-infrared interferometric
measurements. We use a multiple-component, geometric modeling approach to
explain the mid-infrared emission on scales of tens to hundreds of astronomical
units, and find the MIDI measurements are well described by a model consisting
of a one-dimensional Gaussian halo and an inclined (\theta=60 deg)
circumstellar disk extending out to several hundred astronomical units along a
position angle of 160 deg. Finally, we compare our results both with previous
models of this source, and with those of other MYSOs, and discuss the present
situation with mid-infrared interferometric observations of massive stars.Comment: 15 pages, 14 figures. Accepted to Astronomy and Astrophysic
Observing transiting planets with JWST -- Prime targets and their synthetic spectral observations
The James Webb Space Telescope will enable astronomers to obtain exoplanet
spectra of unprecedented precision. Especially the MIRI instrument may shed
light on the nature of the cloud particles obscuring planetary transmission
spectra in the optical and near-infrared. We provide self-consistent
atmospheric models and synthetic JWST observations for prime exoplanet targets
in order to identify spectral regions of interest and estimate the number of
transits needed to distinguish between model setups. We select targets which
span a wide range in planetary temperature and surface gravity, ranging from
super-Earths to giant planets, and have a high expected SNR. For all targets we
vary the enrichment, C/O ratio, presence of optical absorbers (TiO/VO) and
cloud treatment. We calculate atmospheric structures and emission and
transmission spectra for all targets and use a radiometric model to obtain
simulated observations. We analyze JWST's ability to distinguish between
various scenarios. We find that in very cloudy planets such as GJ 1214b less
than 10 transits with NIRSpec may be enough to reveal molecular features.
Further, the presence of small silicate grains in atmospheres of hot Jupiters
may be detectable with a single JWST MIRI transit. For a more detailed
characterization of such particles less than 10 transits are necessary.
Finally, we find that some of the hottest hot Jupiters are well fitted by
models which neglect the redistribution of the insolation and harbor
inversions, and that 1-4 eclipse measurements with NIRSpec are needed to
distinguish between the inversion models. Wet thus demonstrate the capabilities
of JWST for solving some of the most intriguing puzzles in current exoplanet
atmospheric research. Further, by publishing all models calculated for this
study we enable the community to carry out similar or retrieval analyses for
all planets included in our target list.Comment: 24 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Ground-based detection of the near-infrared emission from the dayside of WASP-5b
(Abridged) WASP-5b is a highly irradiated dense hot Jupiter orbiting a G4V
star every 1.6 days. We observed two secondary eclipses of WASP-5b in the J, H
and K bands simultaneously. Thermal emission of WASP-5b is detected in the J
and K bands. The retrieved planet-to-star flux ratios in the J and K bands are
0.168 +0.050/-0.052% and 0.269+/-0.062%, corresponding to brightness
temperatures of 2996 +212/-261K and 2890 +246/-269K, respectively. No thermal
emission is detected in the H band, with a 3-sigma upper limit of 0.166%,
corresponding to a maximum temperature of 2779K. On the whole, our J, H, K
results can be explained by a roughly isothermal temperature profile of ~2700K
in the deep layers of the planetary dayside atmosphere that are probed at these
wavelengths. Together with Spitzer observations, which probe higher layers that
are found to be at ~1900K, a temperature inversion is ruled out in the range of
pressures probed by the combined data set. While an oxygen-rich model is unable
to explain all the data, a carbon-rich model provides a reasonable fit but
violates energy balance.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Broad-band transmission spectrum and K-band thermal emission of WASP-43b as observed from the ground
(Abridged) We observed one transit and one occultation of the hot Jupiter
WASP-43b simultaneously in the g'r'i'z'JHK bands using the GROND instrument on
the MPG/ESO 2.2-meter telescope. From the transit event, we have independently
derived WASP-43's system parameters with high precision, and improved the
period to be 0.81347437(13) days. No significant variation in transit depths is
detected, with the largest deviations coming from the i', H, and K bands. Given
the observational uncertainties, the broad-band transmission spectrum can be
explained by either a flat featureless straight line that indicates thick
clouds, synthetic spectra with absorption signatures of atomic Na/K or
molecular TiO/VO that indicate cloud-free atmosphere, or a Rayleigh scattering
profile that indicates high-altitude hazes. From the occultation event, we have
detected planetary dayside thermal emission in the K-band with a flux ratio of
0.197 +/- 0.042%, which confirms previous detections obtained in the 2.09
micron narrow band and Ks-band. The K-band brightness temperature 1878
+108/-116 K favors an atmosphere with poor day- to night-side heat
redistribution. We also have a marginal detection in the i'-band (0.037
+0.023/-0.021%), which is either a false positive, a signature of non-blackbody
radiation at this wavelength, or an indication of reflective hazes at high
altitude.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Spectral Evolution and Radial Dust Transport in the Prototype Young Eruptive System EX Lup
EX Lup is the prototype of a class of pre-main sequence eruptive stars
defined by their repetitive outbursts lasting several months. In 2008
January-September EX Lup underwent its historically largest outburst,
brightening by about 4 magnitudes in visual light. In previous studies we
discovered on-going silicate crystal formation in the inner disk during the
outburst, but also noticed that the measured crystallinity fraction started
decreasing after the source returned to the quiescent phase. Here we present
new observations of the 10 m silicate feature, obtained with the MIDI and
VISIR instruments at Paranal Observatory. The observations demonstrate that
within five years practically all crystalline forsterite disappeared from the
surface of the inner disk. We reconstruct this process by presenting a series
of parametric axisymmetric radiative transfer models of an expanding dust cloud
that transports the crystals from the terrestrial zone to outer disk regions
where comets are supposed to form. Possibly the early Sun also experienced
similar flare-ups, and the forming planetesimals might have incorporated
crystalline silicate material produced by such outbursts. Finally, we discuss
how far the location of the dust cloud could be constrained by future JWST
observations.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
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