704 research outputs found
Atmospheric Retrieval for Super-Earths: Uniquely Constraining the Atmospheric Composition with Transmission Spectroscopy
We present a retrieval method based on Bayesian analysis to infer the
atmospheric compositions and surface or cloud-top pressures from transmission
spectra of exoplanets with general compositions. In this study, we identify
what can unambiguously be determined about the atmospheres of exoplanets from
their transmission spectra by applying the retrieval method to synthetic
observations of the super-Earth GJ 1214b. Our approach to infer constraints on
atmospheric parameters is to compute their joint and marginal posterior
probability distributions using the MCMC technique in a parallel tempering
scheme. A new atmospheric parameterization is introduced that is applicable to
general atmospheres in which the main constituent is not known a priori and
clouds may be present. Our main finding is that a unique constraint of the
mixing ratios of the absorbers and up to two spectrally inactive gases (such as
N2 and primordial H2+He) is possible if the observations are sufficient to
quantify both (1) the broadband transit depths in at least one absorption
feature for each absorber and (2) the slope and strength of the molecular
Rayleigh scattering signature. The surface or cloud-top pressure can be
quantified if a surface or cloud deck is present. The mean molecular mass can
be constrained from the Rayleigh slope or the shapes of absorption features,
thus enabling to distinguish between cloudy hydrogen-rich atmospheres and high
mean molecular mass atmospheres. We conclude, however, that without the
signature of Rayleigh scattering--even with robustly detected infrared
absorption features--there is no reliable way to tell if the absorber is the
main constituent of the atmosphere or just a minor species with a mixing ratio
of <0.1%. The retrieval method leads us to a conceptual picture of which
details in transmission spectra are essential for unique characterizations of
well-mixed atmospheres.Comment: 23 pages, 13 figures, accepted at ApJ, submitted to ApJ on Nov 4,
201
Photochemistry in Terrestrial Exoplanet Atmospheres III: Photochemistry and Thermochemistry in Thick Atmospheres on Super Earths and Mini Neptunes
Some super Earths and mini Neptunes will likely have thick atmospheres that
are not H2-dominated. We have developed a photochemistry-thermochemistry
kinetic-transport model for exploring the compositions of thick atmospheres on
super Earths and mini Neptunes, applicable for both H2-dominated atmospheres
and non-H2-dominated atmospheres. Using this model to study thick atmospheres
for wide ranges of temperatures and elemental abundances, we classify them into
hydrogen-rich atmospheres, water-rich atmospheres, oxygen-rich atmospheres, and
hydrocarbon-rich atmospheres. We find that carbon has to be in the form of CO2
rather than CH4 or CO in a H2-depleted water-dominated thick atmosphere, and
that the preferred loss of light elements from an oxygen-poor carbon-rich
atmosphere leads to formation of unsaturated hydrocarbons (C2H2 and C2H4). We
apply our self-consistent atmosphere models to compute spectra and diagnostic
features for known transiting low-mass exoplanets GJ 1214 b, HD 97658 b, and 55
Cnc e. For GJ 1214 b like planets we find that (1) C2H2 features at 1.0 and 1.5
micron in transmission and C2H2 and C2H4 features at 9-14 micron in thermal
emission are diagnostic for hydrocarbon-rich atmospheres; (2) a detection of
water-vapor features and a confirmation of nonexistence of methane features
would provide sufficient evidence for a water-dominated atmosphere. In general,
our simulations show that chemical stability has to be taken into account when
interpreting the spectrum of a super Earth/mini Neptune. Water-dominated
atmospheres only exist for carbon to oxygen ratios much lower than the solar
ratio, suggesting that this kind of atmospheres could be rare.Comment: Accepted for publication on Ap
Thermal Emission from Transiting Very-Hot Jupiters: Prospects for Ground-based Detection at Optical Wavelengths
Very hot Jupiters (VHJs) are defined as Jupiter-mass extrasolar planets with
orbital periods shorter than three days. For low albedos the effective
temperatures of irradiated VHJs can reach 2500-3000 K. Thermal emission from
VHJs is therefore potentially strong at optical wavelengths. We explore the
prospects of detecting optical-wavelength thermal emission during secondary
eclipse with existing ground-based telescopes. We show that OGLE-TR-56b and
OGLE-TR-132b are the best suited candidates for detection, and that the
prospects are highest around z'-band (~0.9 microns). We also speculate that any
newly discovered VHJs with the right combination of orbital separation and host
star parameters could be thermally detected in the optical. The lack of
detections would still provide constraints on the planetary albedos and
re-radiation factors.Comment: accepted for publication on ApJ
Constraining Exoplanet Mass from Transmission Spectroscopy
Determination of an exoplanet's mass is a key to understanding its basic
properties, including its potential for supporting life. To date, mass
constraints for exoplanets are predominantly based on radial velocity (RV)
measurements, which are not suited for planets with low masses, large
semi-major axes, or those orbiting faint or active stars. Here, we present a
method to extract an exoplanet's mass solely from its transmission spectrum. We
find good agreement between the mass retrieved for the hot Jupiter HD189733b
from transmission spectroscopy with that from RV measurements. Our method will
be able to retrieve the masses of Earth-sized and super-Earth planets using
data from future space telescopes that were initially designed for atmospheric
characterization.Comment: 66 pages, 25 figures, published in the December 20, 2013 edition of
Science Magazine. Includes supplementary material
The future of spectroscopic life detection on exoplanets
The discovery and characterization of exoplanets have the potential to offer the world one of the most impactful findings ever in the history of astronomy—the identification of life beyond Earth. Life can be inferred by the presence of atmospheric biosignature gases—gases produced by life that can accumulate to detectable levels in an exoplanet atmosphere. Detection will be made by remote sensing by sophisticated space telescopes. The conviction that biosignature gases will actually be detected in the future is moderated by lessons learned from the dozens of exoplanet atmospheres studied in last decade, namely the difficulty in robustly identifying molecules, the possible interference of clouds, and the permanent limitations from a spectrum of spatially unresolved and globally mixed gases without direct surface observations. The vision for the path to assess the presence of life beyond Earth is being established
Helium Atmospheres on Warm Neptune- and Sub-Neptune-Sized Exoplanets and Applications to GJ 436 b
Warm Neptune- and sub-Neptune-sized exoplanets in orbits smaller than
Mercury's are thought to have experienced extensive atmospheric evolution. Here
we propose that a potential outcome of this atmospheric evolution is the
formation of helium-dominated atmospheres. The hydrodynamic escape rates of
Neptune- and sub-Neptune-sized exoplanets are comparable to the
diffusion-limited escape rate of hydrogen, and therefore the escape is heavily
affected by diffusive separation between hydrogen and helium. A helium
atmosphere can thus be formed -- from a primordial hydrogen-helium atmosphere
-- via atmospheric hydrodynamic escape from the planet. The helium atmosphere
has very different abundances of major carbon and oxygen species from those of
a hydrogen atmosphere, leading to distinctive transmission and thermal emission
spectral features. In particular, the hypothesis of a helium-dominated
atmosphere can explain the thermal emission spectrum of GJ 436 b, a warm
Neptune-sized exoplanet, while also consistent with the transmission spectrum.
This model atmosphere contains trace amounts of hydrogen, carbon, and oxygen,
with the predominance of CO over CH4 as the main form of carbon. With our
atmospheric evolution model, we find that if the mass of the initial atmosphere
envelope is 1E-3 planetary mass, hydrodynamic escape can reduce the hydrogen
abundance in the atmosphere by several orders of magnitude in ~10 billion
years. Observations of exoplanet transits may thus detect signatures of helium
atmospheres and probe the evolutionary history of small exoplanets.Comment: ApJ, accepte
The search for signs of life on exoplanets at the interface of chemistry and planetary science
The discovery of thousands of exoplanets in the last two decades that are so different from planets in our own solar system challenges many areas of traditional planetary science. However, ideas for how to detect signs of life in this mélange of planetary possibilities have lagged, and only in the last few years has modeling how signs of life might appear on genuinely alien worlds begun in earnest. Recent results have shown that the exciting frontier for biosignature gas ideas is not in the study of biology itself, which is inevitably rooted in Earth’s geochemical and evolutionary specifics, but in the interface of chemistry and planetary physics.Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Bose Fund
A Computational Tool to Interpret the Bulk Composition of Solid Exoplanets based on Mass and Radius Measurements
The prospects for finding transiting exoplanets in the range of a few to 20
Earth masses is growing rapidly with both ground-based and spaced-based
efforts. We describe a publicly available computer code to compute and quantify
the compositional ambiguities for differentiated solid exoplanets with a
measured mass and radius, including the mass and radius uncertainties.Comment: PASP, in press. 20 pages including 5 figures. Try the MATLAB code and
send us comment
Towards consistent mapping of distant worlds: secondary-eclipse scanning of the exoplanet HD189733b
Mapping distant worlds is the next frontier for exoplanet infrared photometry
studies. Ultimately, constraining spatial and temporal properties of an
exoplanet atmosphere will provide further insight into its physics. For
tidally-locked hot Jupiters that transit and are eclipsed by their host star,
the first steps are now possible.
Our aim is to constrain an exoplanet's shape, brightness distribution (BD)
and system parameters from its light curve. Notably, we rely on the eclipse
scanning.
We use archived Spitzer 8-{\mu}m data of HD189733 (6 transits, 8 secondary
eclipses, and a phase curve) in a global MCMC procedure for mitigating
systematics. We also include HD189733's out-of-transit radial velocity
measurements.
We find a 6-{\sigma} deviation from the expected occultation of a
uniformly-bright disk. This deviation emerges mainly from HD189733b's thermal
pattern, not from its shape. We indicate that the correlation of the orbital
eccentricity, e, and BD (uniform time offset) does also depend on the stellar
density, \rho*, and the impact parameter, b (e-b-\rho*-BD correlation). For
HD189733b, we find that relaxing the e-constraint and using more complex BDs
lead to lower stellar/planetary densities and a more localized and
latitudinally-shifted hot spot. We obtain an improved constraint on the upper
limit of HD189733b's orbital eccentricity, e<0.011 (95%), when including the RV
measurements.
Our study provides new insights into the analysis of exoplanet light curves
and a proper framework for future eclipse-scanning observations. Observations
of the same exoplanet at different wavelengths will improve the constraints on
its system parameters while ultimately yielding a large-scale time-dependent 3D
map of its atmosphere. Finally, we discuss the perspective of extending our
method to observations in the visible, in particular to better understand
exoplanet albedos.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. Final version will be available soon
at http://www.aanda.org by Free Open Acces
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