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TOPIC: Extrasolar Planets


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Posts: 131433
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Massive Exoplanets
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Title: Formation of Massive Exoplanets by Fragmentation of the Protostellar Cloud and Disk Capture
Authors: A. Font-Ribera, J. Miralda-Escudé, I. Ribas

A new model for the formation of Jovian planets by gas fragmentation is proposed. Planets may form at large distances from a protostar (\gtrsim 100 AU), through direct fragmentation of a gas cloud, by the same formation mechanism as wide binaries of stars and brown dwarfs. Subsequently, planets may be gravitationally perturbed by their mutual interactions or perturbations from external bodies into highly eccentric orbits, causing them to plunge through a disk of gas or planetesimals surrounding the central protostar. Dynamical friction from this disk slows down the planet at each plunge, causing its orbit to be gradually circularised and made coplanar with the disk. After the disk dissipates, a large fraction of these planets may be left at orbits small enough to be detected in present radial velocity surveys. Observational tests of this model are discussed.

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RE: Extrasolar Planets
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Astronomers on verge of finding Earth's twin
Planet hunters say it's just a matter of time before they lasso Earth's twin, which almost surely is hiding somewhere in our star-studded galaxy.
Momentum is building: Just last week, astronomers announced they had discovered three super-Earths worlds more massive than ours but small enough to most likely be rocky orbiting a single star. And dozens of other worlds suspected of having masses in that same range were found around other stars.

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Title: Limits to the planet candidate GJ 436c
Authors: R. Alonso (1), M. Barbieri (1), M. Rabus (2), H.J. Deeg (2), J.A. Belmonte (2), J.M. Almenara (2) ((1) LAM, France, (2) IAC, Spain)
(Version v2)

We report on H-band, ground-based observations of a transit of the hot Neptune GJ 436b. Once combined to achieve sampling equivalent to archived observations taken with Spitzer, our measurements reach comparable precision levels. We analyse both sets of observations in a consistent way, and measure the rate of orbital inclination change to be of 0.02±0.04 degrees in the time span between the two observations (253.8 d, corresponding to 0.03±0.05 degrees/yr if extrapolated). This rate allows us to put limits on the relative inclination between the two planets by performing simulations of planetary systems, including a second planet, GJ 436c, whose presence has been recently suggested (Ribas et al. 2008). The allowed inclinations for a 5 M_E super-Earth GJ 436c in a 5.2 d orbit are within ~7 degrees of the one of GJ 436b; for larger differences the observed inclination change can be reproduced only during short sections (<50%) of the orbital evolution of the system. The measured times of three transit centres of the system do not show any departure from linear ephemeris, a result that is only reproduced in <1% of the simulated orbits. Put together, these results argue against the proposed planet candidate GJ 436c.

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Title: Migration of Protoplanets in Radiative Disks
Authors: Wilhelm Kley, Aurelien Crida (Universiy of Tuebingen)

In isothermal disks the migration of protoplanets is directed inward. For small planetary masses the standard type-I migration rates are so fast that this may result in an unrealistic loss of planets into the stars. We investigate the planet-disk interaction in non-isothermal disks and analyse the magnitude and direction of migration for an extended range of planet masses. We have performed detailed two-dimensional numerical simulations of embedded planets including heating/cooling effects as well as radiative diffusion for realistic opacities.
In radiative disks, small planets with M_planet < 50 M_Earth do migrate outward with a rate comparable to absolute magnitude of standard type-I migration. For larger masses the migration is inward and approaches the isothermal, type-II migration rate. Our findings are particularly important for the first growth phase of planets and ease the problem of too rapid inward type-I migration.

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The first space-based observatories to find and study Earthlike planets wont be able to image these bodies but will determine their composition by recording their spectra. Now a new study suggests that the telescopes may recognise a twin of Earth much quicker in fact, in a twinkling.
As seen from space, Earth appears to vary its brightness, or twinkle, as different clouds in its atmosphere rotate in and out of view. The clouds are the main source of light reflected from Earth, notes Enric Pallé of the Institute of Astrophysics of the Canary Islands in Laguna, Spain.

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Posts: 131433
Date:
Exoplanet HAT-P-1b
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Title: Measurement of the Spin-Orbit Angle of Exoplanet HAT-P-1b
Authors: John A. Johnson, Joshua N. Winn, Norio Narita, Keigo Enya, Peter K. G. Williams, Geoffrey W. Marcy, Bun'ei Sato, Yasuhiro Ohta, Atsushi Taruya, Yasushi Suto, Edwin L. Turner, Gaspar Bakos, R. Paul Butler, Steven S. Vogt, Wako Aoki, Motohide Tamura, Toru Yamada, Yuzuru Yoshii, Marton Hidas

We present new spectroscopic and photometric observations of the HAT-P-1 planetary system. Spectra obtained during three transits exhibit the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect, allowing us to measure the angle between the sky projections of the stellar spin axis and orbit normal, \lambda = 3.7 ± 2.1 degrees. The small value of \lambda for this and other systems suggests that the dominant planet migration mechanism preserves spin-orbit alignment. Using two new transit light curves, we refine the transit ephemeris and reduce the uncertainty in the orbital period by an order of magnitude. We find a upper limit on the orbital eccentricity of 0.067, with 99% confidence, by combining our new radial-velocity measurements with those obtained previously.

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RE: Extrasolar Planets
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Title: A Hubble Space Telescope transit light curve for GJ436b
Authors: J. L. Bean, G. F. Benedict, D. Charbonneau, D. Homeier, D. C. Taylor, B. McArthur, A. Seifahrt, S. Dreizler, A. Reiners
(Version v2)

We present time series photometry for six partial transits of GJ436b obtained with the Fine Guidance Sensor instrument on the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). Our analysis of these data yields independent estimates of the host star's radius R_star = 0.505 +0.029/-0.020 R_sun, and the planet's orbital period P = 2.643882 +0.000060/-0.000058 d, orbital inclination i = 85.80 +0.21/-0.25 deg, mean central transit time T_c = 2454455.279241 +0.00026/-0.00025 HJD, and radius R_p = 4.90 +0.45/-0.33 R_earth. The radius we determine for the planet is larger than the previous findings from analyses of an infrared light curve obtained with the Spitzer Space Telescope. Although this discrepancy has a 92% formal significance (1.7 sigma), it might be indicative of systematic errors that still influence the analyses of even the highest-precision transit light curves. Comparisons of all the measured radii to theoretical models suggest that GJ436b has a H/He envelope of ~10% by mass. We also find that the transit times for GJ436b are constant to within 10 s over the 11 planetary orbits that the HST data span. However, the ensemble of published values exhibits a long-term drift and our mean transit time is 128 s later than that expected from the Spitzer ephemeris. The sparseness of the currently available data hinders distinguishing between an error in the orbital period or perturbations arising from an additional object in the system as the cause of the apparent trend. Assuming the drift is due to an error in the orbital period we obtain an improved estimate for it of P = 2.643904 ± 0.000005 d. This value and our measured transit times will serve as important benchmarks in future studies of the GJ436 system.
    
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Title: A Hubble Space Telescope transit light curve for GJ436b
Authors: J. L. Bean, G. F. Benedict, D. Charbonneau, D. Homeier, D. C. Taylor, B. McArthur, A. Seifahrt, S. Dreizler, A. Reiners

We present time series photometry for six partial transits of GJ436b obtained with the Fine Guidance Sensor instrument on the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). Our analysis of these data yields independent estimates of the host star's radius R_star = 0.505 +0.029/-0.020 R_sun, and the planet's orbital period P = 2.643882 +0.000060/-0.000058 d, orbital inclination i = 85.80 +0.21/-0.25 deg, mean central transit time T_c = 2454455.279241 +0.00026/-0.00025 HJD, and radius R_p = 4.90 +0.45/-0.33 R_earth. The radius we determine for the planet is larger than the previous findings from analyses of an infrared light curve obtained with the Spitzer Space Telescope. Although this discrepancy has a 92% formal significance (1.7 sigma), it might be indicative of systematic errors that still influence the analyses of even the highest-precision transit light curves. Comparisons of all the measured radii to theoretical models suggest that GJ436b has a H/He envelope of ~10% by mass. We also find that the transit times for GJ436b are constant to within 10 s over the 12 planetary orbits that the HST data span. However, the ensemble of published values exhibits a long-term drift and our mean transit time is 128 s later than that expected from the Spitzer ephemeris. The sparseness of the currently available data hinders distinguishing between an error in the orbital period or perturbations arising from an additional object in the system as the cause of the apparent trend. Assuming the drift is due to an error in the orbital period we obtain an improved estimate for it of P = 2.643904 ± 0.000005 d. This value and our measured transit times will serve as important benchmarks in future studies of the GJ436 system.

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Title: Misaligned spin-orbit in the XO-3 planetary system?
Authors: G. Hebrard, F. Bouchy, F. Pont, B. Loeillet, M. Rabus, X. Bonfils, C. Moutou, I. Boisse, X. Delfosse, M. Desort, A. Eggenberger, D. Ehrenreich, T. Forveille, A. M. Lagrange, C. Lovis, M. Mayor, F. Pepe, C. Perrier, D. Queloz, N.C. Santos, D. Segransan, S. Udry, A. Vidal-Madjar

The transiting extrasolar planet XO-3b is remarkable, with a high mass and eccentric orbit. The unusual characteristics make it interesting to test whether its orbital plane is parallel to the equator of its host star, as it is observed for other transiting planets. We performed radial velocity measurements of XO-3 with the SOPHIE spectrograph at the 1.93-m telescope of Haute-Provence Observatory during a planetary transit, and at other orbital phases. This allowed us to observe the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect and, together with a new analysis of the transit light curve, to refine the parameters of the planet. The unusual shape of the radial velocity anomaly during the transit provides a hint for a nearly transverse Rossiter-McLaughlin effect. The sky-projected angle between the planetary orbital axis and the stellar rotation axis should be lambda = 70 ± 15 degrees to be compatible with our observations. This suggests that some close-in planets might result from gravitational interaction between planets and/or stars rather than migration due to interaction with the accretion disk. This surprising result requires confirmation by additional observations, especially at lower airmass, to fully exclude the possibility that the signal is due to systematic effects.

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Title: Periastron Precession Measurements in Transiting Extrasolar Planetary Systems at the Level of General Relativity
Authors: András Pál (1,2), Bence Kocsis (1,2) ((1) Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, (2) Eötvös Loránd University)

Transiting exoplanetary systems are surpassingly important among the planetary systems since they provide the widest spectrum of information for both the planet and the host star. If a transiting planet is on an eccentric orbit, the duration of transits T_D is sensitive to the orientation of the orbital ellipse relative to the line of sight. The precession of the orbit results in a systematic variation in both the duration of individual transit events and the observed period between successive transits, P_obs. The periastron of the ellipse slowly precesses due to general relativity and possibly the presence of other planets in the system. This secular precession can be detected through the long-term change in P_obs (transit timing variations, TTV) or in T_D (transit duration variations, TDV). We estimate the corresponding precession measurement precision for repeated future observations of the known eccentric transiting exoplanetary systems (XO-3b, HD 147506b, GJ 436b and HD 17156b) using existing or planned space-borne instruments. The TDV measurement improves the precession detection sensitivity by orders of magnitude over the TTV measurement. We find that TDV measurements over a ~4 year period can typically detect the precession rate to a precision well exceeding the level predicted by general relativity.

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