2019AJ....157..170M


Query : 2019AJ....157..170M

2019AJ....157..170M - Astron. J., 157, 170-170 (2019/May-0)

Self-luminous and irradiated exoplanetary atmospheres explored with HELIOS.

MALIK M., KITZMANN D., MENDONCA J.M., GRIMM S.L., MARLEAU G.-D., LINDER E.F., TSAI S.-M. and HENG K.

Abstract (from CDS):

We present new methodological features and physical ingredients included in the one-dimensional radiative transfer code HELIOS, improving the hemispheric two-stream formalism. We conduct a thorough intercomparison survey with several established forward models, including COOLTLUSTY and PHOENIX, and find satisfactory consistency with their results. Then, we explore the impact of (i) different groups of opacity sources, (ii) a stellar path length adjustment, and (iii) a scattering correction on self-consistently calculated atmospheric temperatures and planetary emission spectra. First, we observe that temperature-pressure (T-P) profiles are very sensitive to the opacities included, with metal oxides, hydrides, and alkali atoms (and ionized hydrogen) playing an important role in the absorption of shortwave radiation (in very hot surroundings). Moreover, if these species are sufficiently abundant, they are likely to induce nonmonotonic T-P profiles. Second, without the stellar path length adjustment, the incoming stellar flux is significantly underestimated for zenith angles above 80°, which somewhat affects the upper atmospheric temperatures and the planetary emission. Third, the scattering correction improves the accuracy of the computation of the reflected stellar light by ∼10%. We use HELIOS to calculate a grid of cloud-free atmospheres in radiative-convective equilibrium for self-luminous planets for a range of effective temperatures, surface gravities, metallicities, and C/O ratios to be used by planetary evolution studies. Furthermore, we calculate dayside temperatures and secondary eclipse spectra for a sample of exoplanets for varying chemistry and heat redistribution. These results may be used to make predictions on the feasibility of atmospheric characterizations with future observations.

Abstract Copyright: © 2019. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

Journal keyword(s): methods: numerical - opacity - planets and satellites: atmospheres - radiative transfer - scattering

Simbad objects: 18

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Number of rows : 18
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 HD 10069b Pl 01 37 25.0332798696 -45 40 40.374717456           ~ 369 1
2 HD 15082b Pl 02 26 51.0582618096 +37 33 01.736482032           ~ 338 1
3 WASP-12b Pl 06 30 32.7966092352 +29 40 20.263502460           ~ 763 1
4 WASP-19b Pl 09 53 40.0765648584 -45 39 33.057187596           ~ 370 1
5 NAME L 320-124b Pl 10 14 51.7786855411 -47 09 24.192778106           ~ 170 0
6 WASP-43b Pl 10 19 38.0088913464 -09 48 22.605801336           ~ 358 1
7 Ross 905b Pl 11 42 11.0933350978 +26 42 23.650782778           ~ 811 1
8 SIPS J1256-1257B BD* 12 56 01.83264 -12 57 27.6912           L7 86 0
9 * e Vir b Pl 13 16 46.5148594512 +09 25 26.960139646           ~ 110 1
10 BD+22 2716b Pl 14 33 06.3571702344 +21 53 40.981395876           ~ 160 1
11 WASP-103b Pl 16 37 15.5765824488 +07 11 00.109678740           ~ 183 1
12 NAME G 139-21b Pl 17 15 18.9339850845 +04 57 50.066612336           ~ 722 1
13 Kepler-7b Pl 19 14 19.5623105760 +41 05 23.367379128           ~ 205 1
14 HD 185603b Pl 19 38 38.7352230144 +31 13 09.217127532           ~ 127 0
15 HD 189733b Pl 20 00 43.7129433648 +22 42 39.073143456           ~ 1438 1
16 HD 195689b Pl 20 31 26.3534153736 +39 56 19.773037500           ~ 279 0
17 HD 195689 SB* 20 31 26.3534153736 +39 56 19.773037500   7.59 7.56     A0 121 0
18 CD-35 16019b Pl 23 59 36.0711872328 -35 01 52.923618408           ~ 130 0

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