Transit Lightcurves of Extrasolar Planets Orbiting Rapidly-Rotating Stars
نویسنده
چکیده
Main-sequence stars earlier than spectral type ∼ F6 or so are expected to rotate rapidly due to their radiative exteriors. This rapid rotation leads to an oblate stellar figure. It also induces the photosphere to be hotter (by up to several thousand Kelvin) at the pole than at the equator as a result of a process called gravity darkening that was first predicted by von Zeipel (1924). Transits of extrasolar planets across such a non-uniform, oblate disk yield unusual and distinctive lightcurves that can be used to determine the relative alignment of the stellar rotation pole and the planet orbit normal. This spin-orbit alignment can be used to constrain models of planet formation and evolution. Orderly planet formation and migration within a disk that is coplanar with the stellar equator will result in spin-orbit alignment. More violent planet-planet scattering events should yield spin-orbit misaligned planets. Rossiter-McLaughlin measurements of transits of lower-mass stars show that some planets are spin-orbit aligned, and some are not. Since Rossiter-McLaughlin measurements are difficult around rapid rotators, lightcurve photometry may be the best way to determine the spin-orbit alignment of planets around massive stars. The Kepler mission will monitor ∼ 10 of these stars within its sample. The lightcurves of any detected planets will allow us to probe the planet formation process around high-mass stars for the first time. Subject headings: techniques:photometric — eclipses — Stars:individual:Altair
منابع مشابه
Searching for Extrasolar Planets from UNSW
The Automated Patrol Telescope, operated by the University of New South Wales, has been undertaking a search for extrasolar planets using the transit method. We present lightcurves from two recent promising candidates; spectroscopic follow-up using the ANU 2.3m telescope shows that the companions are probably low mass stars rather than planets, although more data will be needed to be certain. A...
متن کاملPLANET II: A Microlensing and Transit Search for Extrasolar Planets
Due to their extremely small luminosity compared to the stars they orbit, planets outside our own Solar System are extraordinarily difficult to detect directly in optical light. Careful photometric monitoring of distant stars, however, can reveal the presence of exoplanets via the microlensing or eclipsing effects they induce. The international PLANET collaboration is performing such monitoring...
متن کاملStatus and Prospects of Planetary Transit Searches: Hot Jupiters Galore
The first transiting extrasolar planet, orbiting HD 209458, was a Doppler wobble planet before its transits were discovered with a 10 cm CCD camera. Wide-angle CCD cameras, by monitoring in parallel the light curves of tens of thousands of stars, should find hot Jupiter transits much faster than the Doppler wobble method. The discovery rate could easily rise by a factor 10. The sky holds perhap...
متن کاملArtificial Intelligence on the Final Frontier: Using Machine Learning to Find New Earths
For ages, mankind has looked towards the stars and wondered if our Earth is the only place habitable for life. Now, with recent advancements in technology, we can use powerful telescopes, such as NASA’s Kepler Space Telescope [?], to observe stars in the visible universe to see if these extrasolar stars have extrasolar planets (called ‘exoplanets’) like our Sun and its planets. Specifically, lo...
متن کاملTheoretical Transmission Spectra during Extrasolar Giant Planet Transits
The recent transit observation of HD 209458 bÈan extrasolar planet orbiting a Sun-like starÈ conÐrmed that it is a gas giant and determined that its orbital inclination is 85¡. This inclination makes possible investigations of the planet atmosphere. In this paper we discuss the planet transmission spectra during a transit. The basic tenet of the method is that the planet atmosphere absorption f...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
دوره شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2009