SIMBAD references

2007ApJ...659.1661F - Astrophys. J., 659, 1661-1672 (2007/April-3)

Planetary radii across five orders of magnitude in mass and stellar insolation: application to transits.

FORTNEY J.J., MARLEY M.S. and BARNES J.W.

Abstract (from CDS):

To aid in the physical interpretation of planetary radii constrained through observations of transiting planets, or eventually direct detections, we compute model radii of pure hydrogen-helium, water, rock, and iron planets, along with various mixtures. Masses ranging from 0.01 Earth masses to 10 Jupiter masses at orbital distances of 0.02-10 AU are considered. For hydrogen-helium rich planets, our models are the first to couple planetary evolution to stellar irradiation over a wide range of orbital separations (0.02-10 AU) through a nongray radiative-convective equilibrium atmosphere model. Stellar irradiation retards the contraction of giant planets, but its effect is not a simple function of the irradiation level: a planet at 1 AU contracts as slowly as a planet at 0.1 AU. We confirm the assertion of Guillot that very old giant planets under modest stellar irradiation (like that received by Jupiter and Saturn) develop isothermal atmospheric radiative zones once the planet's intrinsic flux drops to a small fraction of the incident flux. For hydrogen-helium planets, we consider cores up to 90% of the total planet mass, comparable to those of Uranus and Neptune. If ``hot Neptunes'' have maintained their original masses and are not remnants of more massive planets, radii of ∼0.30-0.45 RJ are expected. Water planets are ∼40%-50% larger than rocky planets, independent of mass. Finally, we provide tables of planetary radii at various ages and compositions, and for ice-rock-iron planets we fit our results to analytic functions, which will allow for quick composition estimates, given masses and radii, or mass estimates, given only planetary radii. These results will assist in the interpretation of observations for both the current transiting planet surveys as well as upcoming space missions, including COROT and Kepler.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): Stars: Binaries: Eclipsing - Stars: Planetary Systems

Errata: erratum vol. 668, p. 1267 (2007)

CDS comments: In text, HD 68930b is a misprint for HD 69830b

Simbad objects: 9

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