3,209 research outputs found
Induced two-photon decay of the 2s level and the rate of cosmological hydrogen recombination
Induced emission due to the presence of soft CMB photons slightly increases
the two-photon decay rate of the 2s level of hydrogen defining the rate of
cosmological recombination. This correspondingly changes the degree of
ionization, the visibility function and the resulting primordial temperature
anisotropies and polarization of the CMB on the percent level. These changes
exceed the precision of the widely used CMBFAST and CAMB codes by more than one
order of magnitude and can be easily taken into account.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure, accepted by Astronomy and Astrophysic
Infrared Observations During the Secondary Eclipse of HD 209458 b II. Strong Limits on the Infrared Spectrum Near 2.2 Microns
We report observations of the transiting extrasolar planet, HD 209458 b,
designed to detect the secondary eclipse. We employ the method of `occultation
spectroscopy', which searches in combined light (star and planet) for the
disappearance and reappearance of weak infrared spectral features due to the
planet as it passes behind the star and reappears. Our observations cover two
predicted secondary eclipse events, and we obtained 1036 individual spectra of
the HD 209458 system using the SpeX instrument at the NASA IRTF in September
2001. Our spectra extend from 1.9 to 4.2 microns with a spectral resolution of
1500. We have searched for a continuum peak near 2.2 microns (caused by CO and
water absorption bands), as predicted by some models of the planetary
atmosphere to be approximately 6E-4 of the stellar flux, but no such peak is
detected at a level of about 3E-4 of the stellar flux. Our results represent
the strongest limits on the infrared spectrum of the planet to date and carry
significant implications for understanding the planetary atmosphere. In
particular, some models that assume the stellar irradiation is re-radiated
entirely on the sub-stellar hemisphere predict a flux peak inconsistent with
our observations. Several physical mechanisms can improve agreement with our
observations, including the re-distribution of heat by global circulation, a
nearly isothermal atmosphere, and/or the presence of a high cloud.Comment: Accepted to the Astrophysical Journal 17 pages, 6 figure
Western boundary currents and climate change
A recent paper in Journal of Geophysical Research-Oceans connects recent changes in atmospheric circulation to poleward movement and intensification of western boundary currents. Causes and characteristics of past and future trends in surface wind stress and western boundary currents are discussed here
Cosmological hydrogen recombination: Lyn line feedback and continuum escape
We compute the corrections to the cosmological hydrogen recombination history
due to delayed feedback of Lyman-series photons and the escape in the
Lyman-continuum. The former process is expected to slightly delay
recombination, while the latter should allow the medium to recombine a bit
faster. It is shown that the subsequent feedback of released Lyman-n photons on
the lower lying Lyman-(n-1) transitions yields a maximal correction of DN_e/N_e
0.22% at z~ 1050. Including only Lyman-\beta feedback onto the Lyman-\alpha
transition, accounts for most of the effect. We find corrections to the cosmic
microwave background TT and EE power spectra \change{with typical peak to peak
amplitude |DC^{TT}_l/C^{TT}_l|~0.15% and |\Delta C^{EE}_l/C^{EE}_l|~0.36% at
l<~3000. The escape in the Lyman-continuum and feedback of Lyman-\alpha photons
on the photoionization rate of the second shell lead to modifications of the
ionization history which are very small (less than |DN_e/N_e|~few x 10^{-6}).Comment: 5+epsilon pages, 7 figures, accepted versio
Limits to Transits of the Neptune-mass planet orbiting Gl 581
We have monitored the Neptune-mass exoplanet-hosting M-dwarf Gl 581 with the
1m Swope Telescope at Las Campanas Observatory over two predicted transit
epochs. A neutral density filter centered at 550nm was used during the first
epoch, yielding 6.33 hours of continuous light curve coverage with an average
photometric precision of 1.6 mmags and a cadence of 2.85 min. The second epoch
was monitored in B-band over 5.85 hours, with an average photometric precision
of 1.2 mmags and 4.28 min cadence. No transits are apparent on either night,
indicating that the orbital inclination is less than 88.1 deg for all planets
with radius larger than 0.38 R_Nep = 1.48 R_Earth. Because planets of most
reasonable interior composition have radii larger than 1.55 R_Earth we place an
inclination limit for the system of 88.1 deg. The corresponding minimum mass of
Gl 581b remains 0.97 M_Nep = 16.6 M_Earth.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, 1 table, to appear in PAS
The Impact of Devegetated Dune Fields on North American Climate During the Late Medieval Climate Anomaly
During the Medieval Climate Anomaly, North America experienced severe droughts and widespread mobilization of dune fields that persisted for decades. We use an atmosphere general circulation model, forced by a tropical Pacific sea surface temperature reconstruction and changes in the land surface consistent with estimates of dune mobilization (conceptualized as partial devegetation), to investigate whether the devegetation could have exacerbated the medieval droughts. Presence of devegetated dunes in the model significantly increases surface temperatures, but has little impact on precipitation or drought severity, as defined by either the Palmer Drought Severity Index or the ratio of precipitation to potential evapotranspiration. Results are similar to recent studies of the 1930s Dust Bowl drought, suggesting bare soil associated with the dunes, in and of itself, is not sufficient to amplify droughts over North America
BIOSIGNATURE GASES IN H₂-DOMINATED ATMOSPHERES ON ROCKY EXOPLANETS
Super-Earth exoplanets are being discovered with increasing frequency and some will be able to retain stable H2-dominated atmospheres. We study biosignature gases on exoplanets with thin H2 atmospheres and habitable surface temperatures, using a model atmosphere with photochemistry and a biomass estimate framework for evaluating the plausibility of a range of biosignature gas candidates. We find that photochemically produced H atoms are the most abundant reactive species in H2 atmospheres. In atmospheres with high CO2 levels, atomic O is the major destructive species for some molecules. In Sun-Earth-like UV radiation environments, H (and in some cases O) will rapidly destroy nearly all biosignature gases of interest. The lower UV fluxes from UV-quiet M stars would produce a lower concentration of H (or O) for the same scenario, enabling some biosignature gases to accumulate. The favorability of low-UV radiation environments to accumulate detectable biosignature gases in an H2 atmosphere is closely analogous to the case of oxidized atmospheres, where photochemically produced OH is the major destructive species. Most potential biosignature gases, such as dimethylsulfide and CH3Cl, are therefore more favorable in low-UV, as compared with solar-like UV, environments. A few promising biosignature gas candidates, including NH3 and N2O, are favorable even in solar-like UV environments, as these gases are destroyed directly by photolysis and not by H (or O). A more subtle finding is that most gases produced by life that are fully hydrogenated forms of an element, such as CH4 and H2S, are not effective signs of life in an H2-rich atmosphere because the dominant atmospheric chemistry will generate such gases abiologically, through photochemistry or geochemistry. Suitable biosignature gases in H2-rich atmospheres for super-Earth exoplanets transiting M stars could potentially be detected in transmission spectra with the James Webb Space Telescope
Model Bond albedos of extrasolar giant planets
The atmospheres of extrasolar giant planets are modeled with various
effective temperatures and gravities, with and without clouds. Bond albedos are
computed by calculating the ratio of the flux reflected by a planet (integrated
over wavelength) to the total stellar flux incident on the planet. This
quantity is useful for estimating the effective temperature and evolution of a
planet. We find it is sensitive to the stellar type of the primary. For a 5
M_Jup planet the Bond albedo varies from 0.4 to 0.3 to 0.06 as the primary star
varies from A5V to G2V to M2V in spectral type. It is relatively insensitive to
the effective temperature and gravity for cloud--free planets. Water clouds
increase the reflectivity of the planet in the red, which increases the Bond
albedo. The Bond albedo increases by an order of magnitude for a 13 M_Jup
planet with an M2V primary when water clouds are present. Silicate clouds, on
the other hand, can either increase or decrease the Bond albedo, depending on
whether there are many small grains (the former) or few large grains (the
latter).Comment: 6 pages, 9 figures, uses egs.cls and epsfig.sty, submitted to Physics
and Chemistry of the Earth (proceedings of the April 1998 EGS meeting in
Nice, France
On the Emergent Spectra of Hot Protoplanet Collision Afterglows
We explore the appearance of terrestrial planets in formation by studying the
emergent spectra of hot molten protoplanets during their collisional formation.
While such collisions are rare, the surfaces of these bodies may remain hot at
temperatures of 1000-3000 K for up to millions of years during the epoch of
their formation. These object are luminous enough in the thermal infrared to be
observable with current and next generation optical/IR telescopes, provided
that the atmosphere of the forming planet permits astronomers to observe
brightness temperatures approaching that of the molten surface. Detectability
of a collisional afterglow depends on properties of the planet's atmosphere --
primarily on the mass of the atmosphere. A planet with a thin atmosphere is
more readily detected, because there is little atmosphere to obscure the hot
surface. Paradoxically, a more massive atmosphere prevents one from easily
seeing the hot surface, but also keeps the planet hot for a longer time. In
terms of planetary mass, more massive planets are also easier to detect than
smaller ones because of their larger emitting surface areas. We present
preliminary calculations assuming a range of protoplanet masses (1-10
M_\earth), surface pressures (1-1000 bar), and atmospheric compositions, for
molten planets with surface temperatures ranging from 1000 to 1800 K, in order
to explore the diversity of emergent spectra that are detectable. While current
8- to 10-m class ground-based telescopes may detect hot protoplanets at wide
orbital separations beyond 30 AU (if they exist), we will likely have to wait
for next-generation extremely large telescopes or improved diffraction
suppression techniques to find terrestrial planets in formation within several
AU of their host stars.Comment: 28 pages, 6 figures, ApJ manuscript format, accepted into the Ap
Theoretical Transmission Spectra During Extrasolar Giant Planet Transits
The recent transit observation of HD 209458 b - an extrasolar planet orbiting
a sun-like star - confirmed that it is a gas giant and determined that its
orbital inclination is 85 degrees. This inclination makes possible
investigations of the planet atmosphere. In this paper we discuss the planet
transmission spectra during a transit. The basic tenet of the method is that
the planet atmosphere absorption features will be superimposed on the stellar
flux as the stellar flux passes through the planet atmosphere above the limb.
The ratio of the planet's transparent atmosphere area to the star area is
small, approximately 10^{-3} to 10^{-4}; for this method to work very strong
planet spectral features are necessary. We use our models of close-in
extrasolar giant planets to estimate promising absorption signatures: the
alkali metal lines, in particular the Na I and K I resonance doublets, and the
He I - triplet line at 1083.0 nm. If successful, observations
will constrain the line-of-sight temperature, pressure, and density. The most
important point is that observations will constrain the cloud depth, which in
turn will distinguish between different atmosphere models. We also discuss the
potential of this method for EGPs at different orbital distances and orbiting
non-solar-type stars.Comment: revised to agree with accepted paper, ApJ, in press. 12 page
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