2011ApJ...729...54C


Query : 2011ApJ...729...54C

2011ApJ...729...54C - Astrophys. J., 729, 54 (2011/March-1)

The statistics of albedo and heat recirculation on hot exoplanets.

COWAN N.B. and AGOL E.

Abstract (from CDS):

If both the day-side and night-side effective temperatures of a planet can be measured, it is possible to estimate its Bond albedo, 0 < AB< 1, as well as its day-night heat redistribution efficiency, 0 < {eps} < 1. We attempt a statistical analysis of the albedo and redistribution efficiency for 24 transiting exoplanets that have at least one published secondary eclipse. For each planet, we show how to calculate a sub-stellar equilibrium temperature, T0, and associated uncertainty. We then use a simple model-independent technique to estimate a planet's effective temperature from planet/star flux ratios. We use thermal secondary eclipse measurements–those obtained at λ>0.8 µm–to estimate day-side effective temperatures, Td, and thermal phase variations–when available–to estimate night-side effective temperature. We strongly rule out the "null hypothesis" of a single AB and {eps} for all 24 planets. If we allow each planet to have different parameters, we find that low Bond albedos are favored (AB< 0.35 at 1σ confidence), which is an independent confirmation of the low albedos inferred from non-detections of reflected light. Our sample exhibits a wide variety of redistribution efficiencies. When normalized by T0, the day-side effective temperatures of the 24 planets describe a uni-modal distribution. The two biggest outliers are GJ 436b (abnormally hot) and HD 80606b (abnormally cool), and these are the only eccentric planets in our sample. The dimensionless quantity Td/T0 exhibits no trend with the presence or absence of stratospheric inversions. There is also no clear trend between Td/T0 and T0. That said, the six planets with the greatest sub-stellar equilibrium temperatures (T > 2400 K) have low {eps}, as opposed to the 18 cooler planets, which show a variety of recirculation efficiencies. This hints that the very hottest transiting giant planets are qualitatively different from the merely hot Jupiters. We propose an explanation of this trend based on how a planet's radiative and advective times scale with temperature: both timescales are expected to be shorter for hotter planets, but the temperature dependence of the radiative timescale is stronger, leading to decreased heat recirculation efficiency.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): methods: data analysis - planetary systems

Simbad objects: 33

goto Full paper

goto View the references in ADS

Number of rows : 33
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 WASP-1b Pl 00 20 40.0745768856 +31 59 23.954809596           ~ 133 1
2 * ups And PM* 01 36 47.8415443907 +41 24 19.651368029 4.70 4.64 4.10 3.64 3.35 F9V 963 1
3 * ups And b Pl 01 36 47.8415443907 +41 24 19.651368029           ~ 272 1
4 HD 10069b Pl 01 37 25.0332798696 -45 40 40.374717456           ~ 369 1
5 BD+57 793 * 04 21 52.7048156328 +57 49 01.889294952   10.27 9.85     F5V 152 2
6 WASP-12b Pl 06 30 32.7966092352 +29 40 20.263502460           ~ 763 1
7 HD 46375b Pl 06 33 12.6224391648 +05 27 46.528531452           ~ 70 1
8 CoRoT-1b Pl 06 48 19.1723766840 -03 06 07.710745140           ~ 181 1
9 BD+50 1471 PM* 07 48 06.4723053776 +50 13 32.920598923   12.002 11.138 10.669 10.243 G9V 173 1
10 HD 75289b Pl 08 47 40.3893739728 -41 44 12.455319264           ~ 89 1
11 HD 80606b Pl 09 22 37.5768032712 +50 36 13.435326684           ~ 328 1
12 WASP-19b Pl 09 53 40.0765648584 -45 39 33.057187596           ~ 370 1
13 NAME OGLE-TR-113b Pl 10 52 24.2810533560 -61 26 48.845675976           ~ 119 1
14 Ross 905b Pl 11 42 11.0933350978 +26 42 23.650782778           ~ 810 1
15 BD+28 2507b Pl 16 02 11.8462322592 +28 10 10.420201452           ~ 184 1
16 HD 149026b Pl 16 30 29.6185771608 +38 20 50.308980864           ~ 351 1
17 TrES-3 Pl 17 52 07.0184259768 +37 32 46.237377840           ~ 230 2
18 TrES-4 Pl 17 53 13.0489562760 +37 12 42.586493328           ~ 214 2
19 NAME OGLE-TR-56b Pl 17 56 35.5016678064 -29 32 21.479240220           ~ 201 1
20 NAME V672 Lyr b Pl 19 04 09.8515616256 +36 37 57.446680296           ~ 339 1
21 Kepler-1b Pl 19 07 14.0375836512 +49 18 59.091482160           ~ 330 2
22 HD 179949b Pl 19 15 33.2300695008 -24 10 45.671448072           ~ 123 1
23 CoRoT-2b Pl 19 27 06.4944378024 +01 23 01.359897468           ~ 235 1
24 BD+47 2846 Er* 19 28 59.3538826128 +47 58 10.217007804   10.97 10.48     F6V 306 2
25 BD+47 2846b Pl 19 28 59.3538826128 +47 58 10.217007804           ~ 377 1
26 HD 189733b Pl 20 00 43.7129433648 +22 42 39.073143456           ~ 1435 1
27 HD 189733 BY* 20 00 43.7129433648 +22 42 39.073143456 9.241 8.578 7.648 7.126 6.68 K2V 896 1
28 WASP-2b Pl 20 30 54.1282355304 +06 25 46.341284844           ~ 108 1
29 HD 209458b Pl 22 03 10.7727465312 +18 53 03.549393384           ~ 1859 1
30 BD-15 6290d Pl 22 53 16.7325836486 -14 15 49.304052185           ~ 157 1
31 * 51 Peg b Pl 22 57 27.9804852576 +20 46 07.797040104           ~ 666 1
32 NAME BD+37 4734Bb Pl 22 57 46.8442481880 +38 40 30.358351704           ~ 247 1
33 WASP-4b Pl 23 34 15.0857248317 -42 03 41.047972591           ~ 174 1

To bookmark this query, right click on this link: simbad:objects in 2011ApJ...729...54C and select 'bookmark this link' or equivalent in the popup menu