We discuss the nature of rings that may exist around extrasolar planets.
Taking the general properties of rings around the gas giants in the Solar
System, we infer the likely properties of rings around exoplanets that reside
inside the ice line. Due to their proximity to their host star, rings around
such exoplanets must primarily consist of rocky materials. However, we find
that despite the higher densities of rock compared to ice, most of the observed
extrasolar planets with reliable radii measurements have sufficiently large
Roche radii to support rings. For the currently known transiting extrasolar
planets, Poynting-Robertson drag is not effective in significantly altering the
dynamics of individual ring particles over a time span of 108 years provided
that they exceed about 1 m in size. In addition, we show that significantly
smaller ring particles can exist in optically thick rings, for which we find
typical ring lifetimes ranging from a few times 106 to a few times 109
years. Most interestingly, we find that many of the rings could have nontrivial
Laplacian planes due to the increased effects of the orbital quadrupole caused
by the exoplanets' proximity to their host star, allowing a constraint on the
J2 of extrasolar planets from ring observations. This is particular
exciting, since a planet's J2 reveals information about its interior
structure. Furthermore, measurements of an exoplanet's oblateness and of its
J2, from warped rings, would together place limits on its spin period. Based
on the constraints that we have derived for extrasolar rings, we anticipate
that the best candidates for ring detections will come from transit
observations by the Kepler spacecraft of extrasolar planets with semi-major
axes ∼0.1 AU and larger.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap