2009A&A...493..671F -
Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 493, 671-676 (2009/1-2)
Bulk composition of the transiting hot Neptune around GJ436.
FIGUEIRA P., PONT F., MORDASINI C., ALIBERT Y., GEORGY C. and BENZ W.
Abstract (from CDS):
The hot Neptune orbiting around GJ436 is a unique example of an intermediate mass planet. Its close-in orbit suggests that the planet has undergone migration and its study is fundamental to understand planet formation and evolution. As it transits its parent star, it is the only Neptune-mass extrasolar planet of known mass and radius, being slightly larger and more massive than Neptune (M=22.6M⊕, R=4.19R⊕). In this regime, several bulk compositions are possible: from an Earth-like core with a thick hydrogen envelope to a water-rich planet with a thin hydrogen envelope, and comprising a Neptune-like structure. We combine planet-structure modelling with an advanced planet-formation model to assess the likelihood of the different possible bulk compositions of GJ436b. We find that both an envelope-free water planet (``Ocean planet'') as well as a diminute version of a gaseous giant planet are excluded. Consisting of a rocky core with a thick hydrogen/helium envelope, a ``dry'' composition produces not only too small a radius but is also a very unlikely outcome of planet formation around such a low-mass star. We conclude that GJ436b is probably of much higher rock content than Neptune (more than 45% in mass), with a small H-He envelope (10-20% in mass). This is the expected outcome of the gathering of materials during the migration process in the inner disk, creating a population of which the hot Neptune is representative.
Abstract Copyright:
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Journal keyword(s):
planetary systems - planetary systems: formation - stars: individual: GJ436
Simbad objects:
3
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