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arXiv:1001.0012v2 [astro-ph.EP] 20 Dec 2010Draft version May 20, 2018 |
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Preprint typeset using L ATEX style emulateapj v. 8/13/10 |
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THE STATISTICS OF ALBEDO AND HEAT RECIRCULATION ON HOT EXOPL ANETS |
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Nicolas B. Cowan1,2, Eric Agol2, |
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Draft version May 20, 2018 |
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ABSTRACT |
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If both the day-side and night-side effective temperatures of a pla net can be measured, it is possible |
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to estimate its Bond albedo, 0 < AB<1, as well as its day–night heat redistribution efficiency, |
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0< ε <1. We attempt a statistical analysis of the albedo and redistribution efficiency for 24 |
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transiting exoplanets that have at least one published secondary e clipse. For each planet, we show |
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how to calculate a sub-stellar equilibrium temperature, T0, and associated uncertainty. We then use |
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a simple model-independent technique to estimate a planet’s effective temperature from planet/star |
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flux ratios. We use thermal secondary eclipse measurements —tho se obtained at λ >0.8 micron— |
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to estimate day-side effective temperatures, Td, and thermal phase variations —when available— to |
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estimatenight-sideeffectivetemperature. Westronglyruleoutth e“nullhypothesis”ofasingle ABand |
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εforall 24planets. If wealloweachplanet to havedifferent paramete rs,we find that lowBond albedos |
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are favored ( AB<0.35 at 1σconfidence), which is an independent confirmation of the low albedos |
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inferred from non-detection of reflected light. Our sample exhibits a wide variety of redistribution |
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efficiencies. When normalized by T0, the day-side effective temperatures of the 24 planets describe |
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a uni-modal distribution. The two biggest outliers are GJ 436b (abno rmally hot) and HD 80606b |
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(abnormally cool), and these are the only eccentric planets in our sa mple. The dimensionless quantity |
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Td/T0exhibits no trend with the presence or absence of stratospheric in versions. There is also no |
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clear trend between Td/T0andT0. That said, the 6 planets with the greatest sub-stellar equilibrium |
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temperatures ( T >2400 K) have low ε, as opposed to the 18 cooler planets, which show a variety |
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of recirculation efficiencies. This hints that the very hottest trans iting giant planets are qualitatively |
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different from the merely hot Jupiters. We propose an explanation o f this trend based on how a |
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planet’s radiative and advective times scale with temperature: both timescales are expected to be |
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shorter for hotter planets, but the temperature-dependance of the radiative timescale is stronger, |
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leading to decreased heat recirculation efficiency. |
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Subject headings: methods: data analysis — (stars:) planetary systems — |
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1.INTRODUCTION |
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Short-period exoplanets are expected to have atmo- |
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spheric compositions and dynamics that differ signifi- |
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cantly from Solar System giant planets3. These planets |
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orbit∼100×closer to their host stars than Jupiter does |
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from the Sun. As a result, they receive ∼104×more flux |
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andexperiencetidalforces ∼106×strongerthanJupiter. |
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In contrast to Jupiter, which releases roughly as much |
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power in its interior as it receives from the Sun, short- |
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period exoplanets have power budgets dictated by the |
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flux they receive from their host stars. Roughly speak- |
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ing, the stellar flux incident on a planet does one of two |
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things: it is reflected back into space, or advected else- |
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where on the planet and re-radiated at different wave- |
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lengths. The physical parameters that describe these |
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processes are the planet’s Bond albedo and redistribu- |
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tion efficiency. |
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1.1.Albedo |
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1CIERA Fellow, Northwestern University, 2131 Tech Dr, |
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Evanston, IL 60208 |
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email: n-cowan@northwestern.edu |
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2Astronomy Department, University of Washington, Box |
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351580, Seattle, WA 98195 |
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3For our purposes a “short period” exoplanet is one where the |
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periastron distance is less than 0 .1 AU, regardless of its actual |
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period, and regardless of mass, which may range from Neptune - |
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sized to Brown Dwarf. They are all Class IV and V extrasolar |
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giant planets in the scheme of Sudarsky et al. (2003).Giant planets in the Solar System have albedos greater |
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than 50%because ofthe presenceofcondensedmolecules |
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(H2O, CH 4, NH3, etc.) in their atmospheres. Planets |
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with effective temperatures exceeding ∼400 K should be |
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cloud free, leading to albedos of 0.05–0.4 (Marley et al. |
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1999). If pressure-broadenedNa and K opacity is impor- |
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tant at optical wavelengths (as it is for brown dwarfs, |
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Burrows et al. 2000), then the Bond albedos of hot |
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Jupiters may be less than 10% (Sudarsky et al. 2000). |
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But the very hottest planets, the so-called class V extra- |
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solar giant planets ( Teff>1500 K), might have very high |
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albedosdue to a high silicate cloud layer(Sudarsky et al. |
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2000). For a planet whose albedo is dominated by |
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clouds (as opposed to Rayleigh scattering) the albedo |
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depends on the composition and size of cloud particles |
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(Seager et al. 2000). |
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Earlyattempts to observe reflected light from exoplan- |
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ets (Charbonneau et al. 1999; Collier Cameron et al. |
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2002a; Leigh et al. 2003a,b; Rodler et al. 2008, 2010) in- |
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dicated that they might not be as reflective as Solar Sys- |
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tem gas giants (for a review, see Langford et al. 2010). |
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Measurements of HD 209458b taken with the Cana- |
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dian MOST satellite revealed a very low albedo ( <8%, |
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Rowe et al.2008), andit hassincebeentakenforgranted |
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that all short-period planets have albedos on par with |
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that of charcoal. |
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From the standpoint of the planet’s climate, the im- |
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portant factor is not the albedo at any one wavelength,2 Cowan & Agol |
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Aλ, but rather the integrated albedo, weighted by the in- |
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cident stellar spectrum, known as the Bond albedo and |
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denoted in this paper as AB. The relation between Aλ |
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and the planet’s Bond albedo is not trivial. If the albedo |
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is dominated by gray clouds, then the albedo at a sin- |
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gle wavelength can indeed be extrapolated to obtain AB. |
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For non-grayreflectance spectra, however, it is critical to |
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measureAλat the peak emitting wavelength of the host |
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startoobtainagoodestimateofthe planet’senergybud- |
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get. For example, as pointed out in Marley et al. (1999), |
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planets with identical albedo spectra, Aλ, mayhaveradi- |
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cally different ABdepending on the spectraltype oftheir |
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host stars. |
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1.2.Redistribution Efficiency |
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The first few measurements of hot Jupiter phase vari- |
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ations showed signs that these planets are not all cut |
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from the same cloth. Harrington et al. (2006) and |
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Knutson et al. (2007a) quoted very different phase func- |
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tion amplitudes for the υAndromeda and HD 189733 |
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systems. It was not clear whether the differences were |
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intrinsic to the planets, however, because the data |
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were taken with different instruments, at different wave- |
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lengths, and with very different observation schemes (in |
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any case, subsequent re-analysis of the original data and |
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newly aquired Spitzerobservations of υAndromeda b |
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paint a completely different picture of that system: |
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Crossfield et al. 2010). |
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The uniform study presented in Cowan et al. (2007), |
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on the other hand, showed that HD 179949b and |
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HD209458bexhibit significantlydifferentdegreesofheat |
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recirculation, confirming suspicions. But it was not clear |
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whether hot exoplanets were uni-modal or bi-modal in |
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redistribution: are HD 179949b and HD 209458b end- |
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members of a single distribution, or prototypes for two |
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fundamentally different sorts of exoplanets? |
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The presence or lack of a stratospheric tempera- |
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ture inversion (Hubeny et al. 2003; Fortney et al. 2006; |
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Burrows et al. 2007, 2008; Zahnle et al. 2009) on the |
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day-sides of exoplanets has been invoked to explain |
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a purported bi-modality in recirculation efficiency on |
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hot Jupiters (Fortney et al. 2008). The argument, sim- |
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ply put, is that optical absorbers high in the atmo- |
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sphere of extremely hot Jupiters (equilibrium temper- |
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atures greater than ∼1700 K) would absorb incident |
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photons where the radiative timescales are short, mak- |
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ingit difficult forthese planets torecirculateenergy. The |
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most robust detection of this temperature inversionis for |
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HD 209458b (Knutson et al. 2008), but this planet does |
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not exhibit a large day-night brightness contrast at 8 µm |
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(Cowan et al. 2007). So while temperature inversions |
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seem to exist in the majority of hot Jupiter atmospheres |
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(Knutson et al. 2010), their connection to circulation ef- |
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ficiency —if any— is not clear. |
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1.3.Outline of Paper |
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It has been suggested (e.g., Harrington et al. 2006; |
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Cowan et al. 2007) that observations of secondary |
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eclipses and phase variations each constrain a combina- |
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tion of a planet’s Bond albedo and circulation efficiency. |
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But observations —even phase variations— at a single |
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waveband do little to constrain a planet’s energy bud- |
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get. In this work we show how observations in differentwavebands and for different planets can be meaningfully |
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combined to estimate these planetary parameters. |
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In§2 we introduce a simple model to quantify the |
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day-side and night-side energy budget of a short-period |
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planet, and show how a planet’s Bond albedo, AB, and |
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redistribution efficiency, ε, can be constrained by ob- |
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servations. In §3 we use published observations of |
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24 transiting planets to estimate day-side and —where |
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appropriate—night-sideeffective temperatures. We con- |
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struct a two-dimensionaldistribution function in ABand |
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εin§4. We state our conclusions in §5. |
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2.PARAMETERIZING THE ENERGY BUDGET |
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2.1.Incident Flux |
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Short-period planets have a power budget entirely dic- |
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tated by the flux they receive from their host star, |
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which dwarfs tidal heating or remnant heat of forma- |
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tion. Following Hansen (2008), we define the equi- |
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librium temperature at the planet’s sub-stellar point: |
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T0(t) =Teff(R∗/r(t))1/2, whereTeffandR∗are the star’s |
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effective temperature and radius, and r(t) is the planet– |
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star distance (for a circular orbit ris simply equal to the |
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semi-major axis, a). For shorthand, we define the geo- |
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metrical factor a∗=a/R∗, which is directly constrained |
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by transit lightcurves (Seager & Mall´ en-Ornelas 2003). |
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The incident flux on the planet is given by Finc= |
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1 |
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2σBT4 |
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0, and it is significant that this quantity has some |
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associated uncertainty. For a planet on a circular orbit, |
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the uncertainty in T0=Teff/√a∗is related —to first |
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order— to the uncertainties in the host star’s effective |
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temperature, and the geometrical factor: |
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σ2 |
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T0 |
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T2 |
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0=σ2 |
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Teff |
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T2 |
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eff+σ2 |
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a∗ |
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4a2∗. (1) |
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For a planet with non-zero eccentricity, T0varies with |
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time, but we are only concerned with its value at su- |
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perior conjunction: secondary eclipse occurs at superior |
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conjunction, when we are seeing the planet’s day-side. |
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At that point in the orbit, the planet–star distance is |
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rsc=a(1−e2)/(1−esinω), whereeandωare the |
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planet’s orbital eccentricity and argument of periastron, |
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respectively. |
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For planets with non-zero eccentricity, the uncertainty |
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inT0is given by |
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σ2 |
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T0 |
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T2 |
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0=σ2 |
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Teff |
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T2 |
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eff+σ2 |
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a∗ |
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4a2∗+/parenleftBig |
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e2cos2ω |
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1−e2/parenrightBig |
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σ2 |
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ecosω |
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+/parenleftBig |
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esinω |
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1−e2−1 |
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2(1−esinω)/parenrightBig |
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σ2 |
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esinω,(2) |
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whereσecosωandσesinωarethe observationaluncertain- |
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ties in the two components of the planet’s eccentricity4. |
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2.2.Emergent Flux |
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At secondary eclipse, and in the absence of albedo or |
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energy circulation, the equilibrium temperature of a re- |
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gion on the planet depends on the normalized projected |
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4This formulation is preferable to an error estimate based on σe |
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andσω, because the eccentricity and argument of periastron are |
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highlycorrelated inorbitalfits. Thatsaid, the uncertaint iesσecosω |
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andσesinωare often not included in the literature, in which case |
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we use a slightly different —and more conservative— formulat ion |
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of the error budget using σeandσω.Albedo and Heat Recirculation on Hot Exoplanets 3 |
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distance,γ, from the center of the planetary disc as |
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T(γ) =T0(1−γ2)1/8. The thermal secondary eclipse |
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depth in this limit is given by: |
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Fday |
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F∗=/parenleftbiggRp |
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R∗/parenrightbigg2/parenleftbigghc |
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λkT0/parenrightbigg8/parenleftBig |
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ehc/λkT∗ |
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b−1/parenrightBig |
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×/integraldisplay(λkT0/hc)8 |
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0dx |
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exp(x−1/8)−1, (3) |
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whereT∗ |
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bis the brightness temperature of the star at |
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wavelength λ. |
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In the no-circulation limit, then, the day-side emer- |
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gent spectrum is not exactly that of a blackbody, even |
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if each annulus has a blackbody spectrum. But these |
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differences are not important for the present study, since |
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we are concerned with bolometric flux. By integrating |
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Equation 3 over λ, one obtains the effective tempera- |
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tureoftheday-sideintheno-albedo,no-circulationlimit: |
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Tε=0= (2/3)1/4T0(see also Burrows et al. 2008; Hansen |
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2008). Indeed, treatingtheplanet’sday-sideasauniform |
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hemisphere emitting at this temperature gives nearly the |
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same wavelength dependence as the more complex Equa- |
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tion 3. The Tε=0temperatures for our sample of 24 tran- |
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siting planets are shown in Table 1. These set the max- |
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imum possible day-side effective temperature we should |
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expect to measure. |
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The integrated day-side flux in the general —non-zero |
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circulation— case is more subtle: heat may be trans- |
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ported to the planet’s night-side, and/or to its poles. In |
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this paper we neglect the E-W asymetry in the planet’s |
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temperature map due to zonal flows and hence phase |
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offsets in the thermal phase variations. Under this as- |
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sumption, the day-night temperature contrast can more |
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directly be extracted from the observed thermal phase |
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variations. |
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In practice, manystudies haveadopted asingle param- |
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eter to represent bothzonal and meridional transport. It |
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is instructive to consider the apparent day-side effective |
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temperatures in variouslimits: uniform day-sidetemper- |
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ature andT= 0 on the night-side (this is often referred |
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to as the planet’s “equilibrium temperature”): Tequ= |
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(1/2)1/4T0; in the case of perfect longitudinal transport |
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but no latitudinal transport: Tlong= (8/(3π2))1/4T0; |
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and in the limit of a uniform temperature everywhere |
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on the planet: Tuni= (1/4)1/4T0. |
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Comparing the apparent day-side temperatures in the |
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three limits of circulation above leads to the following |
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simple parametrization of the day-side effective temper- |
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ature in terms of the planetary albedo, AB, and circula- |
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tion efficiency, ε: |
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Td=T0(1−AB)1/4/parenleftbigg2 |
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3−5 |
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12ε/parenrightbigg1/4 |
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,(4) |
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where 0< ε <1. Note that εis related to —but dif- |
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ferent from— the ǫused in (Cowan & Agol 2010). The |
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former is merely a parametrization of the observed disk- |
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integrated effective temperature, while the latter, which |
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can take values from 0 to ∞, is a precisely defined ratio |
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of radiative and advective timescales. The ǫ= 0 case is |
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precisely equal to the ε= 0 case, while the ǫ→ ∞limit |
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is equivalent to ǫ≈0.95. |
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Our definition of εis similar to the Burrows et al.(2006) definition of Pnandyieldsthe sameno-circulation |
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limit. But our ε= 1 limit produces a lower day-side |
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brightness than the Pn= 0.5 limit, because we as- |
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sume that the planet’s day-side has a uniform tempera- |
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ture distribution in that limit (for a discussion of differ- |
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ent redistribution parameterizations, see the appendix of |
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Spiegel & Burrows 2010). |
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In reality, efficient longitudinal transport (read: fast |
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zonalwinds) mayleadtomorebandingandthereforeless |
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efficient latitudinal transport. So one could argue that |
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in the limit of perfect day-night temperature homoge- |
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nization, both the day and night apparent temperatures |
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should beTd= (8/(3π2))1/4T0, in between the Burrows |
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et al. value of Td= (1/3)1/4T0and that suggested by |
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our parameterization, Td= (1/4)1/4T0. At moderate |
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day-night recirculation efficiencies, however, there is a |
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good deal of latitudinal transport (I. Dobbs-Dixon, priv. |
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comm.), so implicitly assuming a constant T∝cos1/4 |
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latitudinal dependence —as done by Burrows et al.— is |
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not founded, either. The bottom line is that any single- |
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parameter implementation of advection is incapable of |
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capturing the real complexities involved, but longitudi- |
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nal transport is the dominant factor in determining day |
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and night effective temperatures. |
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Not withstanding the subtleties discussed above and |
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noting that cooling tends to latitudinaly homogenize |
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night-side temperatures (Cowan & Agol 2010), we get a |
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night-side temperature of: |
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Tn=T0(1−AB)1/4/parenleftBigε |
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4/parenrightBig1/4 |
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. (5) |
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Note thatTdandTnare the equator-weighted tempera- |
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tures of their respective hemispheres (ie, as seen by an |
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edge-on viewer). As such, they will tend to be slightly |
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higher than the hemisphere-averaged temperature, ex- |
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cept in the ε= 1 limit. This is also why the quantity |
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T4 |
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d+T4 |
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nis still a weak function of ε. |
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Fig. 1.— Different kinds of idealized observations constrain the |
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Bond albedo, ABand circulation efficiency, ε, differently. A mea- |
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surement of the secondary eclipse depth at optical waveleng ths is |
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a measure of albedo (solid line). A secondary eclipse depth a t |
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thermal wavelengths gives a joint constraint on albedo and r ecir- |
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culation (dotted line). A measurement of the night-side effe ctive |
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temperature from thermal phase variations yields a constra int (the |
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dashed line) nearly orthogonal to the day-side measurement . |
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In Figure 1 we show how different kinds of observa-4 Cowan & Agol |
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tions constrain ABandε. For this example, we chose |
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constraints consistent with AB= 0.2 andε= 0.3. The |
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solid line is a locus of constant AB; the dotted line is |
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the locus of constant Td/T0; the dashed line is a lo- |
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cus of constant Tn/T0. From this figure it is clear that |
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the measurements complement each other: measuring |
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two of the three quantities (Bond albedo, effective day- |
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side or night-side temperatures) uniquely determines the |
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planet’s albedo and circulation efficiency. When obser- |
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vations have some associated uncertainty, they define a |
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swath through the AB–εplane. |
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3.ANALYSIS |
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3.1.Planetary & Stellar Data |
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We begin by considering all the photometric obser- |
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vations of short-period exoplanets published through |
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November 2010, summarized in Table 1. We have dis- |
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carded photometric observations of non-transiting plan- |
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ets because of their unknown radius and orbital inclina- |
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tion5. This leaves us with 24 transiting exoplanets for |
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which there are observations in at least one waveband |
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at superior conjunction, and in some cases in multiple |
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wavebands and at multiple planetary phases. |
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Stellar and planetary data are taken from the Ex- |
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oplanet Encyclopedia (exoplanet.eu), and references |
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therein. We repeated parts of the analysis with the |
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Exoplanet Data Explorer database (exoplanets.org) and |
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found identical results, within the uncertainties. When |
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the stellar data are not available, we have assumed typi- |
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cal parameters for the appropriate spectral class, and so- |
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lar metallicity. Insofar as we are only concerned with the |
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broadband brightnesses of the stars, our results should |
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not depend sensitively on the input stellar parameters. |
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Knowing the stars’ Teff, loggand [Fe/H], we |
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use the PHOENIX/NextGen stellar spectrum grids |
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(Hauschildt et al. 1999) to determine their brightness |
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temperatures at the observed bandpasses. At each wave- |
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band for which eclipse or phase observations have been |
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obtained, we determine the ratio of the stellar flux to the |
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blackbodyfluxatthatgridstar’s Teff. Wethenapplythis |
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factor to the Teffof the observed star. |
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It is worth noting that the choice of stellar model leads |
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to systematic uncertainties in the planetary brightness |
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that are of order the photometric uncertainties. For |
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example, Christiansen et al. (2010) use stellar models |
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for HAT-P-7 from Kurucz (2005), while we use those |
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of Hauschildt et al. (1999). The resulting 8 µm bright- |
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ness temperatures for HAT-P-7b differ by as much as |
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600 K, or slightly more than 1 σ. Our uniform use |
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of Hauschildt et al. (1999) models should alleviate this |
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problem, however. |
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3.2.From Flux Ratios to Effective Temperature |
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The planet’s albedo and recirculation efficiency gov- |
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ern its effective day-side and night-side temperatures, Td |
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andTn, respectively. Observationally, we can only mea- |
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sure the brightness temperature, ideally at a number of |
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different wavelengths: Tb(λ). If one knew, a priori, the |
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5For completeness, these are: τ-Bootis b, υ-Andromeda b, |
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51 Peg b, Gl 876d, HD 75289b, HD 179949b and HD 46375b |
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(Charbonneau et al. 1999; Collier Cameron et al. 2002b; |
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Leigh et al. 2003a,b; Harrington et al. 2006; Cowan et al. 200 7; |
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Seager & Deming 2009; Crossfield et al. 2010; Gaulme et al. 201 0)emergent spectrum of a planet, one could trivially con- |
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vert a single brightness temperature to an effective tem- |
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perature. Alternatively, if observations were obtained at |
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a number of wavelengths bracketing the planet’s black- |
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body peak, it would be possible to estimate the planet’s |
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bolometric flux and hence its effective temperature in a |
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model-independent way (e.g., Barman 2008). |
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We adopt the latter empirical approach of converting |
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observed flux ratios into brightness temperatures, then |
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using these to estimate the planet’s effective tempera- |
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ture. The secondary eclipse depth in some waveband di- |
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vided by the transit depth is a direct measureofthe ratio |
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of the planet’s day-side intensity to the star’s intensity |
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at that wavelength, ψ(λ). Knowing the star’s brightness |
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temperature at a given wavelength, it is possible to com- |
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pute the apparent brightness temperature of the planet’s |
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day side: |
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Tb(λ) =hc |
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λk/bracketleftbigg |
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log/parenleftbigg |
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1+ehc/λkT∗ |
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b(λ)−1 |
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ψ(λ)/parenrightbigg/bracketrightbigg−1 |
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.(6) |
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On the Rayleigh-Jeans tail, the fractional uncertainty |
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in the brightness temperature is roughly equal to the |
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fractional uncertainty in the eclipse depth; on the Wien |
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tail, the fractional error on brightness temperature can |
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be smaller because the flux is very sensitive to tempera- |
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ture. |
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By the same token, a secondary eclipse depth and |
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phase variation amplitude at a given wavelength can be |
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combined to obtain a measure of the planet’s night-side |
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brightness temperature at that waveband. |
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Since the albedo and recirculation efficiency of the |
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planet are not known ahead of time, it is not immedi- |
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atelyobviouswhich wavelengthsaresensitiveto reflected |
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light and which are dominated by thermal emission. For |
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each planet, we compute the expected blackbody peak if |
|
the planet has no albedo and no recirculation of energy, |
|
λε=0= 2898/Tε=0µm. Insofar as real planets will have |
|
non-zero albedo and non-zero recirculation, the day side |
|
should never reach Tε=0, and the actual spectral energy |
|
distributionwillpeakatslightlylongerwavelengths. The |
|
coolest planet in our sample, Gl 436b, would exhibit a |
|
blackbody peak at λε=0= 3.1µm, while the hottest |
|
planet we consider, WASP-12b, has λε=0= 0.9µm. |
|
In practice this means that ground-based near-IR and |
|
space-based mid-IR (e.g., Spitzer) observations are as- |
|
sumed to measure thermal emission, while space-based |
|
optical observations (MOST, CoRoT, Kepler) may be |
|
contaminated by reflected starlight. |
|
In Figure2, wedemonstratetwo alternativetechniques |
|
to convert an array of brightness temperatures, Tb(λ), |
|
into an estimate of a planet’s effective temperature, Teff. |
|
The solid black line shows a model spectrum of ther- |
|
mal emission from Fortney et al. (2008), with an ef- |
|
fective temperature of Teff= 1941 K shown with the |
|
black dashed line. The expected blackbody peak of |
|
the planet is marked with a vertical dotted line. The |
|
red points are the expected brightness temperatures in |
|
the J, H, and K sbands (crosses), as well as the IRAC |
|
(asterisks) and MIPS (diamond) instruments on Spitzer |
|
(Fazio et al. 2004; Rieke et al. 2004; Werner et al. 2004). |
|
Since the majority of the observations of exoplanets have |
|
been obtained with SpitzerIRAC, we focus on estimat- |
|
ingTeffbasedonlyon brightness temperatures in thoseAlbedo and Heat Recirculation on Hot Exoplanets 5 |
|
Fig. 2.— The solid black line shows a model spectrum from |
|
Fortney et al. (2008) including only thermal emission (ie: n o re- |
|
flected light). The planet’s effective temperature is shown w ith the |
|
black dashed line, while the expected wavelength of the blac kbody |
|
peak of the planet is marked with a black dotted line. The red |
|
points show the expected brightness temperatures in the J, H , and |
|
Ksbands (crosses), as well as the IRAC (asterisks) and MIPS (di a- |
|
mond) instruments on Spitzer. The linear interpolation technique |
|
described in the text is shown with the red line. |
|
four bandpasses. |
|
Wien Displacement: The first approach is to simply |
|
adopt the brightness temperature of the bandpass clos- |
|
est to the planet’s blackbody peak (the black dotted |
|
line). If only the four IRAC channels are available, the |
|
best one can do is the 3.6 µm measurement, yielding |
|
Teff= 1925 K. There is —however— some subtlety in |
|
estimating the peak wavelength, as this is dependent on |
|
knowing the planet’s temperature (and hence ABandε) |
|
a priori. |
|
Linear Interpolation: The linear interpolation tech- |
|
nique, shown with the red line in Figure 2, obviates the |
|
need for an estimate of the planet’s temperature. The |
|
brightness temperature is assumed to be constant short- |
|
ward of the shortest- λobservation, and longward of the |
|
longest-λobservation. Between bandpasses, the bright- |
|
ness temperature changes linearly with λ. As long as |
|
the various brightness temperatures do not differ grossly |
|
from one another, this technique implicitly gives more |
|
weight to observations near the hypothetical blackbody |
|
peak. The bolometric flux of this “model” spectrum is |
|
then computed, and admits a single effective tempera- |
|
ture, which is Teff= 1927 K for the current example. |
|
Since we hope to apply our routine to planets with well |
|
sampled blackbody peaks, we adopt the linear interpola- |
|
tion technique, as it can make use of multiple brightness |
|
temperature estimates near the peak. |
|
Thetwotechniquesdescribedaboveproducesimilaref- |
|
fective temperatures, though —unsurprisingly— neither |
|
gives precisely the correct answer. But these system- |
|
atic errors are comparable or smaller than the photo- |
|
metric uncertainty in observations of individual bright- |
|
ness temperatures (see Table 1). The best IR observa- |
|
tions for the nearest, brightest planetary systems (e.g., |
|
HD 189733b and HD 209458b) lead to observational un- |
|
certainties of approximately 50 K in brightness temper- |
|
ature. For many planets, the uncertainty is 100–200 K. |
|
By that metric, either the Wien displacement or the lin- |
|
ear interpolation routines give adequate estimates of the |
|
effective temperature, with errors of 16 K and 14 K, re-spectively. |
|
Wemakeamorequantitativeanalysisofthesystematic |
|
uncertainties involved in the Linear Interpolation tem- |
|
perature estimates as follows. We produce 8800 mock |
|
data sets: 100 realizations for 11 models and data in |
|
up to 8 wavebands (J, H, K, IRAC, MIPS; Since this nu- |
|
mericalexperiment choosesrandom bands from the eight |
|
available, the results should not be very different if ad- |
|
ditional wavebands are considered). We run our Linear |
|
Interpolation technique on each of these and plot in Fig- |
|
ure 3 the estimated day-side temperature normalized by |
|
the actual model effective temperature versus the num- |
|
ber of wavebands used in the estimate. The temperature |
|
estimates cluster near Test/Teff= 1, indicating that the |
|
technique is not significantly biased. The scatter in es- |
|
timates decreases as more wavebands are used, from a |
|
standard deviation of 7.6% if only a single brightness |
|
temperature is used, down to 2.4% if photometry is ac- |
|
quired in eight bands. We incorporate this systematic |
|
error into our analysis by adding it in quadrature to |
|
the observational uncertainties described in the follow- |
|
ing paragraph. This has the desirable effect that planets |
|
with fewer observations have a larger systematic uncer- |
|
tainty on their effective temperature. |
|
Fig. 3.— The Linear Interpolation technique for estimating day- |
|
side effective as tested on a suite of eleven hot Jupiter spect ral |
|
models provided by J.J. Fortney. The y-axis shows the estima ted |
|
day-side effective temperature normalized by the actual mod el ef- |
|
fective temperature. The x-axis represents the number of br ight- |
|
ness temperatures used in the estimate. Each color correspo nds to |
|
one of the eleven models used in the comparison. The black err or |
|
bars represent the standard deviation in the normalized tem pera- |
|
ture estimates. |
|
Inpractice,wewouldliketopropagatethephotometric |
|
uncertainties to the estimate of Teff. For the Wien Dis- |
|
placement technique, this uncertainty propagates triv- |
|
ially to the effective temperature. For the linear inter- |
|
polation technique, a Monte Carlo can be used to esti- |
|
mate the uncertainty in Teff: the input eclipse depths |
|
are randomly shifted 1000 times in a manner consistent |
|
with their photometric uncertainties —assuming Gaus- |
|
sianerrors—andtheeffectivetemperatureisrecomputed |
|
repeatedly. Thescatterintheresultingvaluesof Teffpro- |
|
vides an estimate of the observational uncertainty in the |
|
parameter, to which we add in quadrature the estimate |
|
ofsystematicerrordescribedabove. The resultinguncer- |
|
tainties are listed in Table 1. These uncertainties should6 Cowan & Agol |
|
be compared to the uncertainties in Tε=0(also listed in |
|
Table 1), which are computed using the uncertainty in |
|
the star’s properties and the planet’s orbit. |
|
There are two practical issues with the linear interpo- |
|
lation temperature estimation technique. In some cases, |
|
onlyupperlimitshavebeenobtained, thereforeonecould |
|
setψ= 0, with the appropriate1-sigmauncertainty. But |
|
this approach leads to huge uncertainties in Tefffor plan- |
|
ets with a secondary eclipse upper-limit near their black- |
|
body peak. Instead of “punishing” these planets, we opt |
|
to not use upper-limits (though for completeness we in- |
|
clude them in Table 1). Secondly, when multiple mea- |
|
surements of an eclipse depth have been published for |
|
a given waveband, we use the most recent observation, |
|
indicated with a superscript “ e” in Table 1. In all cases |
|
these observations either explicitly agree with their older |
|
counterpart, or agree with the re-analyzed older data. |
|
4.RESULTS |
|
4.1.Looking for Reflected Light |
|
For each planet, we use thermal observations (essen- |
|
tially those in the J, H, K s, andSpitzerbands) to es- |
|
timate the planet’s effective day-side temperature, Td, |
|
and —when phase variations are available— Tn. These |
|
values are listed in Table 1. In five cases (CoRoT- |
|
1b, CoRoT-2b, HAT-P-7b, HD 209458b, TrES-2b), sec- |
|
ondary eclipses and/or phase variations have been ob- |
|
tained at optical wavelengths. Such observations have |
|
the potential to directly constrain the albedo of these |
|
planets. One approach is to adopt the Tdfrom thermal |
|
observations and calculate the expected contrast ratio at |
|
optical wavelengths, under the assumption of blackbody |
|
emission (see also Kipping & Bakos 2010). Insofar as |
|
the observed eclipse depths are deeper than this calcu- |
|
lated depth, one can invoke the contribution of reflected |
|
light and compute a geometric albedo, Ag. If one treats |
|
the planet as a uniform Lambert sphere, the geometric |
|
albedo is related to the spherical albedo at that wave- |
|
length byAλ=3 |
|
2Ag. These values are listed in Table 1. |
|
But reflected light is not the only explanation for an |
|
unexpectedly deep optical eclipse. Alternatively, the |
|
emissivity of the planets may simply be greater at op- |
|
tical wavelengths than at mid-IR wavelengths, in agree- |
|
mentwith realisticspectralmodelsofhotJupiters, which |
|
predict brightness temperatures greater than Teffon the |
|
Wien tail (see, for example, the Fortney et al. model |
|
showninFigure2, whichdoesnotincludereflectedlight). |
|
Note that this increasein emissivityshould occurregard- |
|
less of whether or not the planet has a stratosphere: by |
|
definition, the depth at which the optical thermal emis- |
|
sion is emitted is the depth at which incident starlight |
|
is absorbed, which will necessarily be a hot layer — |
|
assuming the incident stellar spectrum peaks in the op- |
|
tical. |
|
Determining the albedo directly (ie: by observing re- |
|
flected light) can be difficult for short period planets, |
|
because there is no way to distinguish between reflected |
|
and re-radiated photons. The blackbody peaks of the |
|
star and planet often differ by less than a micron. There- |
|
fore, unlike Solar System planets, these worlds do not |
|
exhibit a minimum in their spectral energy distribution |
|
between the reflected and thermal peaks. The hottest |
|
—and therefore most ambiguous case— of the five tran-siting planets with optical constraints is HAT-P-7b. If |
|
one takes the mid-IR eclipse depths at face value, the |
|
planet has a day-side effective temperature of ∼2000 K. |
|
When combined with the Kepler observations, one com- |
|
putesanalbedoofgreaterthan50%. Thelargeday-night |
|
amplitude seen in the Kepler bandpass is then simply |
|
due to the fact that the planet’s night-side reflects no |
|
starlight, and the cool day-side can be attributed to high |
|
ABand/orε. If, on the other hand, one takes the op- |
|
tical flux to be entirely thermal in origin ( Aλ= 0), the |
|
day-side effective temperature is ∼2800 K. This is very |
|
close to that planet’s Tε=0, leaving very little power left |
|
for the night-side, again explaining the large day-night |
|
contrast observed by Kepler. The truth probably lies |
|
somewhere between these two extremes, but in any case |
|
this degeneracy will be neatly broken with Warm Spitzer |
|
observations: the two scenarios outlined above will lead |
|
to small and large thermal phase variations, respectively. |
|
It is telling that the only optical measurement in Table 1 |
|
that is unanimously considered to constrain albedo — |
|
and not thermal emission— is the MOST observations |
|
of HD 209458b (Rowe et al. 2008), the coolest of the five |
|
transiting planets with optical photometric constraints. |
|
The bottom line is that extracting a constraint on re- |
|
flected light from optical measurements of hot Jupiters is |
|
best done with a detailed spectral model. But even when |
|
reflectedlightcanbedirectlyconstrained,convertingthis |
|
constraint on Aλinto a constraint on ABalso requires |
|
detailedknowledgeofboththestarandtheplanet’sspec- |
|
tral energy distributions, making for a model-dependent |
|
exercise. |
|
4.2.Populating the AB-εPlane |
|
Setting aside optical eclipses and direct measurements |
|
of albedo, we may use the rich near- and mid-IR data to |
|
constrain the Bond albedo and redistribution efficiency |
|
of short-period giant planets. We define a 20 ×20 grid in |
|
ABandεand use Equations 4 & 5 to calculate the nor- |
|
malized day-side and night-side effective temperatures, |
|
Td/T0andTn/T0, at each grid point, ( i,j). For each |
|
planet, we have an observational estimate of the day-side |
|
effective temperature, and in three cases we also have an |
|
estimate of the night-side effective temperature (as well |
|
as associated uncertainties). |
|
We first verifywhether ornot the observationsarecon- |
|
sistent with a single ABandε. To evaluate this “null |
|
hypothesis”, we compute the usual χ2=/summationtext24 |
|
i=1(model− |
|
data)2/error2at each grid point. We use only the esti- |
|
mates of day-side and (when available) night-side effec- |
|
tive temperatures to calculate the χ2, giving us 27-2=25 |
|
degreesoffreedom. The“best-fit”has χ2= 132(reduced |
|
χ2= 5.3), so the current observations strongly rule out |
|
a single Bond albedo and redistribution efficiency for all |
|
24 planets. |
|
For 21 of the 24 planets considered here, we construct |
|
a two-dimensional distribution function for each planet |
|
as follows: |
|
PDF(i,j) =1/radicalbig |
|
2πσ2 |
|
de−(Td−Td(i,j))2/(2σd)2.(7) |
|
This defines a swath through parameter space with the |
|
same shape as the dotted line in Figure 1. |
|
For the three remaining planets (HD 149026b,Albedo and Heat Recirculation on Hot Exoplanets 7 |
|
HD 189733b, HD 209458b), phase variation measure- |
|
ments help break the degeneracy: |
|
PDF(i,j) =1√ |
|
2πσ2 |
|
de−(Td−Td(i,j))2/(2σd)2 |
|
×1√ |
|
2πσ2ne−(Tn−Tn(i,j))2/(2σn)2.(8) |
|
Fig. 4.— The global distribution function for short-period exo- |
|
planets in the AB–εplane. The gray-scale shows the sum of the |
|
normalized probability distribution function for the 24 pl anets in |
|
our sample. The data mostly consist of infrared day-side flux es, |
|
leading to the dominant degeneracy (see first the dotted line in |
|
Figure 1). |
|
We create a two-dimensional normalized probability |
|
distribution function (PDF) for each planet, then add |
|
these together to create the global PDF shown in Fig- |
|
ure 4. This is a democratic way of representing the data, |
|
since each planet’s distribution contributes equally. |
|
In Figures 5 and 6 we show the distribution functions |
|
for the albedo and circulation of the 24 planets in our |
|
sample,obtainedbymarginalizingtheglobalPDFofFig- |
|
ure 4 over either ABorε. |
|
Fig. 5.— The solid black line shows the projection of the 2- |
|
dimensional probability distribution function (the gray- scale of |
|
Figure 4) projected onto the ε-axis. The dashed line shows the |
|
ε-distribution if one requires that all planets have Bond alb edos |
|
less than 0.1; under this assumption, we see hints of a bimoda l |
|
distribution in heat circulation efficiency.Fig. 6.— The solid black line shows the projection of the 2- |
|
dimensionalprobabilitydistributionfunction (the gray- scale ofFig- |
|
ure 4) projected onto the AB-axis. The cumulative distribution |
|
function (not shown) yields a 1 σupper limit of AB<0.35. |
|
The solid line in Figure 5 shows no evidence of bi- |
|
modality in heat redistribution efficiency, although there |
|
is a wide range of behaviors. The dashed line in Figure 5 |
|
shows theε-distribution if one requires the albedo to be |
|
low,AB<0.1. There are then many high-recirculation |
|
planets, since advection is the only way to depress the |
|
day-side temperature in the absence of albedo. Inter- |
|
estingly, the dashed line doesshow tentative evidence of |
|
two separate peaks in ε: if short-period giant planets |
|
have uniformly low albedos, then there appear to be two |
|
modes of heat recirculation efficiency. We revisit this |
|
idea below. |
|
Figure 6 shows that planets in this sample are consis- |
|
tent with a low Bond albedo. Note that this constraint |
|
is based entirely on near- and mid-infrared observations, |
|
and is thus independent from the claims of low albedo |
|
based on searches for reflected light (Rowe et al. 2008, |
|
and references therein). Furthermore, this is a constraint |
|
on the Bond albedo, rather than the albedo in any lim- |
|
ited wavelength range. |
|
In Figure 7 we plot the dimensionless day-side effec- |
|
tive temperature, Td/T0, against the maximum expected |
|
day-side temperature, Tε=0. The cyan asterisks in Fig- |
|
ure 7 show the four hot Jupiters without temperature |
|
inversions, while most of the remaining planets have in- |
|
versions (Knutson et al. 2010). The presence or absence |
|
of an inversion does not appear to affect the efficiency of |
|
day–night heat recirculation. |
|
Planets should lie below the solid red line in Figure 7, |
|
which denotes Tε=0= (2/3)1/4T0. Of the 24 planets in |
|
our sample, only one (Gl 436b) has a day-side effective |
|
temperature significantly above the Tε=0limit6. This |
|
planet is by far the coolest in our sample, it is on an ec- |
|
centric orbit, and observations indicate that it may have |
|
a non-equilibrium atmosphere (Stevenson et al. 2010). |
|
There is no reason, on the other hand, that planets |
|
shouldn’t lie below the red dotted line in Figure 7: |
|
all it would take is non-zero Bond albedo. That said, |
|
only 3 of the 24 planets we consider are in this region, |
|
6This is driven by the abnormally high 3.6 micron brightness |
|
temperature; including the 4.5 micron eclipse upper limit d oes not |
|
significantly change our estimate of this planet’s effective temper- |
|
ature.8 Cowan & Agol |
|
Fig. 7.— The dimensionless day-side effective temperature, |
|
Td/T0, plotted against the maximum expected day-side temper- |
|
ature,Tε=0. The red lines correspond to three fiducial limits of |
|
recirculation, assuming AB= 0: no recirculation (solid), uniform |
|
day-hemisphere (dashed), and uniform planet (dotted). The gray |
|
points indicate the default values (using only observation s with |
|
λ >0.8 micron) for the four planets whose optical eclipse depths |
|
may be probing thermal emission rather than just reflected li ght |
|
(from left to right: TrES-2b, CoRoT-2b, CoRoT-1b, HAT-P-7b ). |
|
For these planets we have here elected to include optical mea sure- |
|
ments in our estimate of the day-side bolometric flux and effec tive |
|
temperature, shown in black. The cyan asterisks denote thos e hot |
|
Jupiters known notto have a stratospheric inversion according |
|
to (Knutson et al. 2010). They are, from left to right: TrES-1 b, |
|
HD 189733b, TrES-3b, WASP-4b. The two red x’s denote the ec- |
|
centric planets in our sample, which are also the two worst ou tliers. |
|
with the greatest outlier being HD 80606b, a planet on |
|
an extremely eccentric orbit with superior conjunction |
|
nearly coinciding with periastron. As such, it is likely |
|
that much of the energy absorbed by the planet at that |
|
point in its orbit performs mechanical work (speeding up |
|
winds, puffingupthe planet, etc. SeealsoCowan & Agol |
|
2010) rather than merely warming the gas. Gl 436b and |
|
HD 80606b are denoted by red x’s in Figure 7. |
|
The gray points in Figure 7 indicate the default val- |
|
ues (using only observationswith λ>0.8 micron) for the |
|
four planets whose optical eclipse depths may be probing |
|
thermal emission rather than just reflected light (from |
|
left to right: TrES-2b, CoRoT-2b, CoRoT-1b, HAT- |
|
P-7b). For these planets we have here elected to use |
|
all available flux ratios (including optical observations |
|
potentially contaminated by reflected light) to estimate |
|
the day-side bolometric flux and effective temperature, |
|
shown as black points in Figure 7. |
|
If one takes these day-side effective temperature es- |
|
timates at face value, it appears that the planets with |
|
Tε=0<2400 K exhibit a wide-variety of redistribution |
|
efficiencies and/or Bond albedos, but are consistent with |
|
AB= 0. It is worth noting that many of the best char- |
|
acterized planets in this region have Td/T0≈0.75, and |
|
this accounts for the sharp peak in the dotted line of Fig- |
|
ure 5 atε= 0.75. The hottest 6 planets, on the other |
|
hand, have uniformly high Td/T0, indicating that they |
|
have both low Bond albedo andlow redistribution effi- |
|
ciency. These planets must not have the high-altitude, |
|
reflective silicate clouds hypothesized in Sudarsky et al. |
|
(2000). But this conclusion is dependent on how one |
|
interprets the Keplerobservations of HAT-P-7b: if the |
|
large optical flux ratio is due to reflected light, then this |
|
planet is cooler than we think, and even the hottest tran-siting planets exhibit a variety of behaviors. |
|
5.SUMMARY & CONCLUSIONS |
|
We have described how to estimate a planet’s incident |
|
power budget ( T0), where the uncertainties are driven by |
|
the uncertainties in the host star’s effective temperature |
|
and size, as well as the planet’s orbit. We then described |
|
a model-independent technique to estimate the effective |
|
temperature of a planet based on planet/star flux ra- |
|
tiosobtained at variouswavelengths. When the observed |
|
day-side and night-side effective temperatures are com- |
|
pared, one can constrain a combination of the planet’s |
|
Bond albedo, AB, and its recirculation efficiency, ε. We |
|
applied this analysis on 24 known transiting planets with |
|
measured infrared eclipse depths. |
|
Our principal results are: |
|
1. Essentially all of the planets are consistent with low |
|
Bond albedo. |
|
2. We firmly rule out the “null hypothesis”, whereby all |
|
transiting planets can be fit by a single ABandε. It |
|
is not immediately clear whether this stems from differ- |
|
ences in Bond albedo, recirculation efficiency, or both. |
|
3. In the few cases where it is possible to unambiguously |
|
infer an albedo based on optical eclipse depths, they are |
|
extremely low, implying correspondingly low Bond albe- |
|
dos (<10%). If one adopts such low albedos for all |
|
the planets in our sample, the discrepancies in day-side |
|
effective temperature must be due to differences in recir- |
|
culation efficiency. |
|
4. These differences in recirculation efficiency do not |
|
appear to be correlated with the presence or absence of |
|
a stratospheric inversion. |
|
5. Planets cooler than Tε=0= 2400 K exhibit a wide va- |
|
riety of circulation efficiencies that do not appear to be |
|
correlated with equilibrium temperature. Alternatively, |
|
theseplanetsmayhavedifferent (but generallylow)albe- |
|
dos. Planets hotter than Tε=0= 2400 K have uniformly |
|
low redistribution efficiencies and albedos. |
|
The apparent decrease in advective efficiency with |
|
increasing planetary temperature remains unexplained. |
|
One hypothesis, mentioned earlier, is that TiO and VO |
|
would provide additional optical opacity in atmospheres |
|
hotter than T∼1700 K, leading to temperature in- |
|
versions and reduced heat recirculation on these plan- |
|
ets (Fortney et al. 2008). But if our sample shows any |
|
sharp change it behavior it occurs near 2400 K, rather |
|
than 1700K. One couldinvokeanotheroptical absorber, |
|
but in any case the lack of correlation —pointed out in |
|
thisworkandelsewhere—betweenthepresenceofatem- |
|
perature inversionand the efficiency of heat recirculation |
|
makes this explanation suspect. Another possible expla- |
|
nation for the observed trend is that the hottest planets |
|
have the most ionized atmospheres and may suffer the |
|
most severe magnetic drag (Perna et al. 2010). |
|
The simplest explanation for this trend is simply that |
|
the radiative time is a steeper function of temperature |
|
than the advective time: advective efficiency is given |
|
roughly by the ratio of the radiative and advective times |
|
(eg: Cowan & Agol 2010). In the limit of Newtonian |
|
cooling, the radiative time scales as τrad∝T−3. If one |
|
assumes the wind speed to be of order the local sound |
|
speed, then the advective time scales as τadv∝T−0.5. |
|
One might therefore naively expect the advective effi- |
|
ciency to scale as T−2.5. Such an explanation would notAlbedo and Heat Recirculation on Hot Exoplanets 9 |
|
explain the apparent sharp transition seen at 2400 K, |
|
however. |
|
The combination of optical observations of secondary |
|
eclipses and thermal observations of phase variations is |
|
the best way to constrain planetary albedo and circu- |
|
lation. The optical observations should be taken near |
|
the star’s blackbody peak, both to maximize signal-to- |
|
noise, and to avoidcontaminationfrom the planet’s ther- |
|
mal emission, but this separationmay not be possible for |
|
the hottest transiting planets. The thermal observations, |
|
likewise, should be near the planet’s blackbody peak to |
|
better constrain its bolometric flux. Note that this wave- |
|
length is shortwardof the ideal contrastratio, which typ- |
|
ically falls on the planet’s Rayleigh-Jeans tail. Further- |
|
more, the thermal phase observations should span a full |
|
planetaryorbit: thelightcurveminimumisthemostsen- |
|
sitive measure of ε, and should occur nearly half an orbit |
|
apart from the light curve maximum, despite skewed di- |
|
urnal heatingpatterns (Cowan & Agol 2008, 2010). This |
|
means that observing campaigns that only cover a little |
|
more than half an orbit (transit →eclipse) are probably |
|
underestimating the real peak-trough phase amplitude.A possible improvement to this study would be to per- |
|
form a uniform data reduction for all the Spitzerexo- |
|
planet observations of hot Jupiters. These data make up |
|
the majority of the constraints presented in our study |
|
and most are publicly available. And while the pub- |
|
lished observations were analyzed in disparate ways, a |
|
consensus approach to correcting detector systematics is |
|
beginning to emerge. |
|
N.B.C. acknowledges useful discussions of aspects of |
|
this work with T. Robinson, M.S. Marley, J.J. Fort- |
|
ney, T.S. Barman and D.S. Spiegel. Thanks to our |
|
referee B.M.S. Hansen for insightful feedback, and to |
|
E.D. Feigelson for suggestions about statistical methods. |
|
N.B.C. was supported by the Natural Sciences and Engi- |
|
neering Research Council of Canada. E.A. is supported |
|
by a National Science Foundation Career Grant. Sup- |
|
port for this work was provided by NASA through an |
|
award issued by JPL/Caltech. This research has made |
|
use of the Exoplanet Orbit Database and the Exoplanet |
|
Data Explorer at exoplanets.org. |
|
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TABLE 1 |
|
Secondary Eclipses & Phase Variations of Exoplanets |
|
Planet Tε=0[K]aλ[µm]bEclipse DepthcTbright[K] Phase AmplitudecDerived Quantitiesd |
|
CoRoT-1b12424(84) 0.60(0.42) 1 .6(6)×10−42726(141) Td=2674(144) K |
|
0.71(0.25) 1 .26(33)×10−42409(75) 1 .0(3)×10−4Aλ<0.1 |
|
2.10(0.02) 2 .8(5)×10−32741(125) Td(A= 0)=2515(84) K |
|
2.15(0.32) 3 .36(42)×10−32490(157) |
|
3.6(0.75) 4 .15(42)×10−32098(116) |
|
4.5(1.0) 4 .82(42)×10−32084(106) |
|
CoRoT-2b21964(42) 0.60(0.42) 6(2) ×10−52315(85) Td=1864(233) K |
|
0.71(0.25) 1 .02(20)×10−42215(49) Aλ= 0.16(7) |
|
1.65(0.25) <1.7×10−3(3σ) Td(A= 0)=2010(144) K |
|
2.15(0.32) 1 .6(9)×10−31914(292) |
|
3.6(0.75) 3 .55(20)×10−31798(40) |
|
4.5(1.0)e4.75(19)×10−31791(33) |
|
4.5(1.0) 5 .10(42)×10−3 |
|
8.0(2.9) 4 .1(1.1)×10−3 |
|
8.0(2.9)e4.09(80)×10−31318(143) |
|
Gl 436b3934(41) 3.6(0.75) 4 .1(3)×10−41145(23) Td=1082(38) K |
|
4.5(1.0) <1.0×10−4(3σ) |
|
5.8(1.4) 3 .3(1.4)×10−4797(106) |
|
8.0(2.9)e4.52(27)×10−4737(17) |
|
8.0(2.9) 5 .7(8)×10−4 |
|
8.0(2.9) 5 .4(7)×10−4 |
|
16(5) 1 .40(27)×10−3963(126) |
|
24(9) 1 .75(41)×10−31016(182) |
|
HAT-P-1b41666(38) 3.6(0.75) 8 .0(8)×10−41420(47) Td=1439(59) K |
|
4.5(1.0) 1 .35(22)×10−31507(100) |
|
5.8(1.4) 2 .03(31)×10−31626(128) |
|
8.0(2.9) 2 .38(40)×10−31564(151) |
|
HAT-P-7b52943(95) 0.65(0.4) 1 .30(11)×10−43037(35) 1 .22(16)×10−4Td=2086(156) K |
|
3.6(0.75) 9 .8(1.7)×10−42063(152) Aλ= 0.58(5) |
|
4.5(1.0) 1 .59(22)×10−32378(179) Td(A= 0)=2830(86) K |
|
5.8(1.4) 2 .45(31)×10−32851(235) |
|
8.0(2.9) 2 .25(52)×10−32512(403) |
|
HD 80606b61799(50) 8.0(2.9) 1 .36(18)×10−31137(73) Td=1137(113) K |
|
HD 149026b71871(17) 8.0(2.9)e3.7(0.8)×10−4976(276) 2 .3(7)×10−4Td=1571(231) K |
|
8.0(2.9) 8 .4(1.1)×10−4Tn=976(286) K |
|
HD 189733b81537(16) 2.15(32) <4.0×10−4(1σ) Td=1605(52) K |
|
3.6(0.75) 2 .56(14)×10−31639(34) Tn=1107(132) K |
|
4.5(1.0) 2 .14(20)×10−31318(45) |
|
5.8(1.4) 3 .10(34)×10−31368(69) |
|
8.0(2.9) 3 .381(55)×10−3 |
|
8.0(2.9) 3 .91(22)×10−31.2(2)×10−3 |
|
8.0(2.9)e3.440(36)×10−31259(7) 1 .2(4)×10−3 |
|
16(5) 5 .51(30)×10−31338(52) |
|
24(9) 5 .98(38)×10−3 |
|
24(9)e5.36(27)×10−31202(46) 1 .3(3)×10−3 |
|
HD 209458b91754(15) 0.5(0.3) 7(9) ×10−62368(156) Td=1486(53) K |
|
2.15(0.32) <3×10−4(1σ) Aλ= 0.09(7) |
|
3.6(0.75) 9 .4(9)×10−41446(45) Td(A= 0)=2031(128) K |
|
4.5(1.0) 2 .13(15)×10−31757(57) Tn=1476(304) K |
|
5.8(1.4) 3 .01(43)×10−31890(149) |
|
8.0(2.9) 2 .40(26)×10−31480(94) <1.5×10−3(2σ) |
|
24(9) 2 .60(44)×10−31131(143) |
|
OGLE-TR-56b102874(84) 0.90(0.15) 3 .63(91)×10−42696(116) Td=2696(236) K |
|
OGLE-TR-113b111716(33) 2.15(0.32) 1 .7(5)×10−31918(164) Td=1918(219) K |
|
TrES-1b121464(16) 3.6(0.75) <1.5×10−3(1σ) Td=998(67) K |
|
4.5(1.0) 6 .6(1.3)×10−4972(56) |
|
8.0(2.9) 2 .25(36)×10−31152(94) |
|
TrES-2b131917(21) 0.65(0.4) 1 .14(78)×10−52020(132) Td=1623(76) K |
|
2.15(0.32) 6 .2(1.2)×10−41655(80) Aλ= 0.06(3) |
|
3.6(0.75) 1 .27(21)×10−31490(84) Td(A= 0) = 1751(80) K |
|
4.5(1.0) 2 .30(24)×10−31652(74) |
|
5.8(1.4) 1 .99(54)×10−31373(177) |
|
8.0(2.9) 3 .59(60)×10−31659(163) |
|
TrES-3b142093(32) 0.7(0.3) <6.2×10−4(1σ) Td=1761(66) K |
|
1.25(0.16) <5.1×10−4(3σ) |
|
2.15(0.32) 2 .41(43)×10−3 |
|
2.15(0.32)e1.33(17)×10−31770(58) |
|
3.6(0.75) 3 .46(35)×10−31818(73)12 Cowan & Agol |
|
TABLE 1 |
|
Secondary Eclipses & Phase Variations of Exoplanets |
|
4.5(1.0) 3 .72(54)×10−31649(107) |
|
5.8(1.4) 4 .49(97)×10−31621(173) |
|
8.0(2.9) 4 .75(46)×10−31480(82) |
|
TrES-4b152250(37) 3.6(0.75) 1 .37(11)×10−31889(63) Td=1891(81) K |
|
4.5(1.0) 1 .48(16)×10−31727(83) |
|
5.8(1.4) 2 .61(59)×10−32112(283) |
|
8.0(2.9) 3 .18(44)×10−32168(197) |
|
WASP-1b162347(35) 3.6(0.75) 1 .17(16)×10−31678(87) Td=1719(89) K |
|
4.5(1.0) 2 .12(21)×10−31923(91) |
|
5.8(1.4) 2 .82(60)×10−32042(253) |
|
8.0(2.9) 4 .70(46)×10−32587(176) |
|
WASP-2b171661(69) 3.6(0.75) 8 .3(3.5)×10−41264(164) Td=1280(121) K |
|
4.5(1.0) 1 .69(17)×10−31380(53) |
|
5.8(1.4) 1 .92(77)×10−31299(232) |
|
8.0(2.9) 2 .85(59)×10−31372(154) |
|
WASP-4b182163(60) 3.6(0.75) 3 .19(31)×10−32156(97) Td=2146(140) K |
|
4.5(1.0) 3 .43(27)×10−31971(75) |
|
WASP-12b193213(119) 0.9(0.15) 8 .2(1.5)×10−43002(104) Td=2939(98) K |
|
1.25(0.16) 1 .31(28)×10−32894(149) |
|
1.65(0.25) 1 .76(18)×10−32823(88) |
|
2.15(0.32) 3 .09(13)×10−33018(51) |
|
3.6(0.75) 3 .79(13)×10−32704(49) |
|
4.5(1.0) 3 .82(19)×10−32486(68) |
|
5.8(1.4) 6 .29(52)×10−33167(179) |
|
8.0(2.9) 6 .36(67)×10−32996(229) |
|
WASP-18b203070(50) 3.6(0.75) 3 .1(2)×10−33000(107) Td=2998(138) K |
|
4.5(1.0) 3 .8(3)×10−33128(150) |
|
5.8(1.4) 4 .1(2)×10−33095(103) |
|
8.0(2.9) 4 .3(3)×10−32991(153) |
|
WASP-19b212581(49) 1.65(0.25) 2 .59(45)×10−32677(135) Td=2677(244) K |
|
XO-1b221526(24) 3.6(0.75) 8 .6(7)×10−41300(32) Td=1306(47) K |
|
4.5(1.0) 1 .22(9)×10−31265(34) |
|
5.8(1.4) 2 .61(31)×10−31546(89) |
|
8.0(2.9) 2 .10(29)×10−31211(87) |
|
XO-2231685(33) 3.6(0.75) 8 .1(1.7)×10−41447(102) Td=1431(98) K |
|
4.5(1.0) 9 .8(2.0)×10−41341(105) |
|
5.8(1.4) 1 .67(36)×10−31497(155) |
|
8.0(2.9) 1 .33(49)×10−31179(219) |
|
XO-3241982(82) 3.6(0.75) 1 .01(4)×10−31875(30) Td=1871(63) K |
|
4.5(1.0) 1 .43(6)×10−31965(40) |
|
5.8(1.4) 1 .34(49)×10−31716(330) |
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8.0(2.9) 1 .50(36)×10−31625(236) |
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aThe planet’s expected day-side effective temperature in the absence of reflection or recirculation ( AB= 0,ε= 0). The 1 σuncertainty is shown |
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in parenthese. |
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bThe bandwidth is shown in parenthese. |
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cEclipse depths and phase amplitudes are unitless, since the y are measured relative to stellar flux. |
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dTdandTndenote the day-side and night-side effective temperatures o f the planet, as estimated from thermal secondary eclipse de pths and |
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thermal phase variations, respectively. The estimated 1 σuncertainties are shown in parentheses. The default day-si de temperature is computed |
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using only observations at λ >0.8µm. Eclipse measurements at shorter wavelengths may then be u sed to estimate the planet’s albedo at those |
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wavelengths, Aλ. Note that this is a spherical albedo; the geometric albedo i s given by Ag=2 |
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3Aλ. If —on the other hand— AB= 0 is assumed, |
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then all the day-side flux is thermal, regardless of waveband , yielding the second Tdestimate. |
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eWhen multiple measurements of an eclipse depth have been pub lished in a given waveband, we use the most recent observatio n. In all cases |
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these observations are either explicitly agree with their o lder counterpart, or agree with the re-analyzed older data. |
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1Snellen et al. (2009); Alonso et al. (2009b); Gillon et al. (2 009); Rogers et al. (2009); Deming et al. (2010),2Alonso et al. (2009a); Snellen et al. |
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(2010); Gillon et al. (2010); Alonso et al. (2010); Deming et al. (2010),3Deming et al. (2007); Demory et al. (2007); Stevenson et al. ( 2010); |
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Knutson et al. in prep.,4Todorov et al. (2010),5Borucki et al. (2009); Christiansen et al. (2010),6Laughlin et al. (2009),7Knutson et al. |
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(2009b),8Deming et al. (2006); Knutson et al. (2007a); Barnes et al. (2 007); Charbonneau et al. (2008); Knutson et al. (2009c); Ago l et al. |
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(2010),9Richardson et al. (2003); Deming et al. (2005); Cowan et al. ( 2007); Rowe et al. (2008); Knutson et al. (2008),10Sing & L´ opez-Morales |
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(2009),11Snellen & Covino (2007),12Charbonneau et al. (2005); Knutson et al. (2007b),13O’Donovan et al. (2010); Croll et al. (2010a); |
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Kipping & Bakos (2010b),14Fressin et al. (2010); Croll et al. (2010b); Christiansen et al. (2010b),15Knutson et al. (2009a),16,17Wheatley et al. |
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(2010),18Beerer et al. (2010),19L´ opez-Morales et al. (2010); Campo et al. (2010); Croll et a l. (2010c),20Nymeyer et al. (2010),21Anderson et al. |
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(2010),22Machalek et al. (2008),23Machalek et al. (2009),24Machalek et al. (2010) |