76 research outputs found
The full spectral radiative properties of Proxima Centauri
The discovery of Proxima b, a terrestrial temperate planet, presents the
opportunity of studying a potentially habitable world in optimal conditions. A
key aspect to model its habitability is to understand the radiation environment
of the planet in the full spectral domain. We characterize the X-rays to mid-IR
radiative properties of Proxima with the goal of providing the
top-of-atmosphere fluxes on the planet. We also aim at constraining the
fundamental properties of the star. We employ observations from a large number
of facilities and make use of different methodologies to piece together the
full spectral energy distribution of Proxima. In the high-energy domain, we pay
particular attention to the contribution by rotational modulation, activity
cycle, and flares so that the data provided are representative of the overall
radiation dose received by the atmosphere of the planet. We present the full
spectrum of Proxima covering 0.7 to 30000 nm. The integration of the data shows
that the top-of-atmosphere average XUV irradiance on Proxima b is 0.293 W m^-2,
i.e., nearly 60 times higher than Earth, and that the total irradiance is
877+/-44 W m^-2, or 64+/-3% of the solar constant but with a significantly
redder spectrum. We also provide laws for the XUV evolution of Proxima
corresponding to two scenarios. Regarding the fundamental properties of
Proxima, we find M=0.120+/-0.003 Msun, R=0.146+/-0.007 Rsun, Teff=2980+/-80 K,
and L=0.00151+/-0.00008 Lsun. In addition, our analysis reveals a ~20% excess
in the 3-30 micron flux of the star that is best interpreted as arising from
warm dust in the system. The data provided here should be useful to further
investigate the current atmospheric properties of Proxima b as well as its past
history, with the overall aim of firmly establishing the habitability of the
planet.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Tidal dissipation in rotating low-mass stars and implications for the orbital evolution of close-in planets I. From the PMS to the RGB at solar metallicity
Star-planet interactions must be taken into account in stellar models to
understand the dynamical evolution of close-in planets. The dependence of the
tidal interactions on the structural and rotational evolution of the star is of
peculiar importance and should be correctly treated. We quantify how tidal
dissipation in the convective envelope of rotating low-mass stars evolves from
the pre-main sequence up to the red-giant branch depending on the initial
stellar mass. We investigate the consequences of this evolution on planetary
orbital evolution. We couple the tidal dissipation formalism described in
Mathis (2015) to the stellar evolution code STAREVOL and apply it to rotating
stars with masses between 0.3 and 1.4 M. In addition, we generalize the
work of Bolmont & Mathis (2016) by following the orbital evolution of close-in
planets using the new tidal dissipation predictions for advanced phases of
stellar evolution. On the PMS the evolution of tidal dissipation is controlled
by the evolution of the internal structure of the contracting star. On the MS
it is strongly driven by the variation of surface rotation that is impacted by
magnetized stellar winds braking. The main effect of taking into account the
rotational evolution of the stars is to lower the tidal dissipation strength by
about four orders of magnitude on the main-sequence, compared to a normalized
dissipation rate that only takes into account structural changes. The evolution
of the dissipation strongly depends on the evolution of the internal structure
and rotation of the star. From the pre-main sequence up to the tip of the
red-giant branch, it varies by several orders of magnitude, with strong
consequences for the orbital evolution of close-in massive planets. These
effects are the strongest during the pre-main sequence, implying that the
planets are mainly sensitive to the star's early history.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in A&
On the influence of equilibrium tides on transit-timing variations of close-in super-Earths. I. Application to single-planet systems and the case of K2-265 b
In this work, we investigate the influence of planetary tidal interactions on
the transit-timing variations of short-period low-mass rocky exoplanets. For
such purpose, we employ the recently-developed creep tide theory to compute
tidally-induced TTVs. We implement the creep tide in the recently-developed
Posidonius N-body code, thus allowing for a high-precision evolution of the
coupled spin-orbit dynamics of planetary systems. As a working example for the
analyses of tidally-induced TTVs, we apply our version of the code to the
K2-265 b planet. We analyse the dependence of tidally-induced TTVs with the
planetary rotation rate, uniform viscosity coefficient and eccentricity. Our
results show that the tidally-induced TTVs are more significant in the case
where the planet is trapped in non-synchronous spin-orbit resonances, in
particular the 3/2 and 2/1 spin-orbit resonant states. An analysis of the TTVs
induced separately by apsidal precession and tidally-induced orbital decay has
allowed for the conclusion that the latter effect is much more efficient at
causing high-amplitude TTVs than the former effect by 2 - 3 orders of
magnitude. We compare our findings for the tidally-induced TTVs obtained with
Posidonius with analytical formulations for the transit timings used in
previous works, and verified that the results for the TTVs coming from
Posidonius are in excellent agreement with the analytical formulations. These
results show that the new version of Posidonius containing the creep tide
theory implementation can be used to study more complex cases in the future.
For instance, the code can be used to study multiplanetary systems, in which
case planet-planet gravitational perturbations must be taken into account
additionally to tidal interactions to obtain the TTVs.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures. Accepted with minor revisions in Astronomy and
Astrophysics (A&A
Mercury-T: a new code to study tidally evolving multi-planet systems: applications to Kepler-62
A large proportion of observed planetary systems contain several planets in a compact orbital configuration, and often harbor at least one close-in object. These systems are then most likely tidally evolving. We investigate how the effects of planet-planet interactions influence the tidal evolution of planets. We introduce for that purpose a new open-source addition to the Mercury N-body code, Mercury-T, which takes into account tides, general relativity and the effect of rotation-induced flattening in order to simulate the dynamical and tidal evolution of multi-planet systems. It uses a standard equilibrium tidal model, the constant time lag model. Besides, the evolution of the radius of several host bodies has been implemented (brown dwarfs, M-dwarfs of mass 0.1 M-circle dot, Sun-like stars, Jupiter). We validate the new code by comparing its output for one-planet systems to the secular equations results. We find that this code does respect the conservation of total angular momentum. We applied this new tool to the planetary system Kepler-62. We find that tides influence the stability of the system in some cases. We also show that while the four inner planets of the systems are likely to have slow rotation rates and small obliquities, the fifth planet could have a fast rotation rate and a high obliquity. This means that the two habitable zone planets of this system, Kepler-62e ad f are likely to have very different climate features, and this of course would influence their potential at hosting surface liquid water
Water Condensation Zones around Main Sequence Stars
Understanding the set of conditions that allow rocky planets to have liquid
water on their surface -- in the form of lakes, seas or oceans -- is a major
scientific step to determine the fraction of planets potentially suitable for
the emergence and development of life as we know it on Earth. This effort is
also necessary to define and refine the so-called "Habitable Zone" (HZ) in
order to guide the search for exoplanets likely to harbor remotely detectable
life forms. Until now, most numerical climate studies on this topic have
focused on the conditions necessary to maintain oceans, but not to form them in
the first place. Here we use the three-dimensional Generic Planetary Climate
Model (PCM), historically known as the LMD Generic Global Climate Model (GCM),
to simulate water-dominated planetary atmospheres around different types of
Main-Sequence stars. The simulations are designed to reproduce the conditions
of early ocean formation on rocky planets due to the condensation of the
primordial water reservoir at the end of the magma ocean phase. We show that
the incoming stellar radiation (ISR) required to form oceans by condensation is
always drastically lower than that required to vaporize oceans. We introduce a
Water Condensation Limit, which lies at significantly lower ISR than the inner
edge of the HZ calculated with three-dimensional numerical climate simulations.
This difference is due to a behavior change of water clouds, from low-altitude
dayside convective clouds to high-altitude nightside stratospheric clouds.
Finally, we calculated transit spectra, emission spectra and thermal phase
curves of TRAPPIST-1b, c and d with H2O-rich atmospheres, and compared them to
CO2 atmospheres and bare rock simulations. We show using these observables that
JWST has the capability to probe steam atmospheres on low-mass planets, and
could possibly test the existence of nightside water clouds.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic
Evidence for Spin–Orbit Alignment in the TRAPPIST-1 System
In an effort to measure the Rossiter–McLaughlin effect for the TRAPPIST-1 system, we performed high-resolution spectroscopy during transits of planets e, f, and b. The spectra were obtained with the InfraRed Doppler spectrograph on the Subaru 8.2 m telescope, and were supplemented with simultaneous photometry obtained with a 1 m telescope of the Las Cumbres Observatory Global Telescope. By analyzing the anomalous radial velocities, we found the projected stellar obliquity to be λ = 1 ± 28° under the assumption that the three planets have coplanar orbits, although we caution that the radial-velocity data show correlated noise of unknown origin. We also sought evidence for the expected deformations of the stellar absorption lines, and thereby detected the "Doppler shadow" of planet b with a false-alarm probability of 1.7%. The joint analysis of the observed residual cross-correlation map including the three transits gave λ = 19_(-15)^(+13)°. These results indicate that the the TRAPPIST-1 star is not strongly misaligned with the common orbital plane of the planets, although further observations are encouraged to verify this conclusion
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