2015A&A...577A..83D


Query : 2015A&A...577A..83D

2015A&A...577A..83D - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 577A, 83-83 (2015/5-1)

Can we constrain the interior structure of rocky exoplanets from mass and radius measurements?

DORN C., KHAN A., HENG K., CONNOLLY J.A.D., ALIBERT Y., BENZ W. and TACKLEY P.

Abstract (from CDS):

We present an inversion method based on Bayesian analysis to constrain the interior structure of terrestrial exoplanets, in the form of chemical composition of the mantle and core size. Specifically, we identify what parts of the interior structure of terrestrial exoplanets can be determined from observations of mass, radius, and stellar elemental abundances. We perform a full probabilistic inverse analysis to formally account for observational and model uncertainties and obtain confidence regions of interior structure models. This enables us to characterize how model variability depends on data and associated uncertainties. We test our method on terrestrial solar system planets and find that our model predictions are consistent with independent estimates. Furthermore, we apply our method to synthetic exoplanets up to 10 Earth masses and up to 1.7 Earth radii, and to exoplanet Kepler-36b. Importantly, the inversion strategy proposed here provides a framework for understanding the level of precision required to characterize the interior of exoplanets. Our main conclusions are (1) observations of mass and radius are sufficient to constrain core size; (2) stellar elemental abundances (Fe, Si, Mg) are principal constraints to reduce degeneracy in interior structure models and to constrain mantle composition; (3) the inherent degeneracy in determining interior structure from mass and radius observations does not only depend on measurement accuracies, but also on the actual size and density of the exoplanet. We argue that precise observations of stellar elemental abundances are central in order to place constraints on planetary bulk composition and to reduce model degeneracy. We provide a general methodology of analyzing interior structures of exoplanets that may help to understand how interior models are distributed among star systems. The methodology we propose is sufficiently general to allow its future extension to more complex internal structures including hydrogen- and water-rich exoplanets.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): planets and satellites: terrestrial planets - planets and satellites: interiors

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 CoRoT-7b Pl 06 43 49.4690164104 -01 03 46.826642700           ~ 402 1
2 BD-07 4003d Pl 15 19 26.8269387505 -07 43 20.189497466           ~ 152 1
3 Kepler-102b Pl 18 45 55.8559851072 +47 12 28.845259020           ~ 39 0
4 Kepler-10b Pl 19 02 43.0613892904 +50 14 28.701617339           ~ 297 1
5 Kepler-97b Pl 19 09 18.3874144296 +48 40 24.368309184           ~ 38 0
6 Kepler-131c Pl 19 14 07.4053097208 +40 56 32.328971700           ~ 35 0
7 BD+48 2893c Pl 19 24 07.7659706688 +49 02 24.928348272           ~ 58 1
8 Kepler-36b Pl 19 25 00.0428079600 +49 13 54.630900876           ~ 149 1
9 Kepler-36 Er* 19 25 00.0428079600 +49 13 54.630900876   12.795 12.174 12.094   F2 219 1
10 Kepler-100b Pl 19 25 32.6432787456 +41 59 24.945100548           ~ 57 0
11 BD+38 3583b Pl 19 25 40.3885404552 +38 40 20.413186860           ~ 105 0
12 Kepler-406c Pl 19 27 23.5375431360 +44 58 05.726111052           ~ 35 0
13 Kepler-406b Pl 19 27 23.5375431360 +44 58 05.726111052           ~ 64 0
14 Kepler-57c Pl 19 34 33.9093923088 +44 39 25.358372136           ~ 29 1
15 Kepler-78b Pl 19 34 58.0137407208 +44 26 53.960186940           ~ 140 1
16 Kepler-99b Pl 19 49 24.9577803120 +41 18 00.214368480           ~ 49 0

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