2015ApJ...810..118K


Query : 2015ApJ...810..118K

2015ApJ...810..118K - Astrophys. J., 810, 118 (2015/September-2)

Spitzer secondary eclipse observations of five cool gas giant planets and empirical trends in cool planet emission spectra.

KAMMER J.A., KNUTSON H.A., LINE M.R., FORTNEY J.J., DEMING D., BURROWS A., COWAN N.B., TRIAUD A.H.M.J., AGOL E., DESERT J.-M., FULTON B.J., HOWARD A.W., LAUGHLIN G.P., LEWIS N.K., MORLEY C.V., MOSES J.I., SHOWMAN A.P. and TODOROV K.O.

Abstract (from CDS):

In this work we present Spitzer 3.6 and 4.5 µm secondary eclipse observations of five new cool (<1200 K) transiting gas giant planets: HAT-P-19b, WASP-6b, WASP-10b, WASP-39b, and WASP-67b. We compare our measured eclipse depths to the predictions of a suite of atmosphere models and to eclipse depths for planets with previously published observations in order to constrain the temperature- and mass-dependent properties of gas giant planet atmospheres. We find that the dayside emission spectra of planets less massive than Jupiter require models with efficient circulation of energy to the night side and/or increased albedos, while those with masses greater than that of Jupiter are consistently best-matched by models with inefficient circulation and low albedos. At these relatively low temperatures we expect the atmospheric CH4/CO ratio to vary as a function of metallicity, and we therefore use our observations of these planets to constrain their atmospheric metallicities. We find that the most massive planets have dayside emission spectra that are best-matched by solar metallicity atmosphere models, but we are not able to place strong constraints on metallicities of the smaller planets in our sample. Interestingly, we find that the ratio of the 3.6 and 4.5 µm brightness temperatures for these cool transiting planets is independent of planet temperature, and instead exhibits a tentative correlation with planet mass. If this trend can be confirmed, it would suggest that the shape of these planets' emission spectra depends primarily on their masses, consistent with the hypothesis that lower-mass planets are more likely to have metal-rich atmospheres.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): eclipses - planetary systems - techniques: photometric

Simbad objects: 16

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Number of rows : 16
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 HAT-P-19 * 00 38 04.0135699416 +34 42 41.553538560   13.834 12.853 12.611   K1V 36 1
2 HAT-P-19b Pl 00 38 04.0135699416 +34 42 41.553538560           ~ 63 1
3 HAT-P-20b Pl 07 27 39.9488720808 +24 20 11.516231112           ~ 82 1
4 Ross 905b Pl 11 42 11.0933350978 +26 42 23.650782778           ~ 811 1
5 HAT-P-12b Pl 13 57 33.4668726399 +43 29 36.601508739           ~ 176 1
6 WASP-39b Pl 14 29 18.4151689656 -03 26 40.204480380           ~ 205 1
7 WASP-39 * 14 29 18.4151689656 -03 26 40.204480380   12.93 12.09 12.17 11.29 ~ 69 1
8 WASP-67b Pl 19 42 58.5218345280 -19 56 58.521259680           ~ 55 1
9 WASP-67 * 19 42 58.5218345280 -19 56 58.521259680   12.90 12.54     K0V 32 1
10 WASP-80b Pl 20 12 40.1693365800 -02 08 39.187438476           ~ 120 1
11 WASP-6b Pl 23 12 37.7368282608 -22 40 26.273805024           ~ 138 1
12 WASP-6 * 23 12 37.7368282608 -22 40 26.273805024   12.90 11.91     G8V 94 1
13 WASP-10 V* 23 15 58.3006181424 +31 27 46.296056268   12.4   12.03   K5V 90 1
14 WASP-10b Pl 23 15 58.3006181424 +31 27 46.296056268           ~ 111 1
15 CD-35 16019 PM* 23 59 36.0711872328 -35 01 52.923618408   10.49 9.87 9.91   G6 111 0
16 CD-35 16019b Pl 23 59 36.0711872328 -35 01 52.923618408           ~ 129 0

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