Transcript Document
Recent Developments of Studies for Transiting Exoplanets Norio Narita National Astronomical Observatory of Japan Outline • Introduction of Science of Transiting Exoplanets • What’s New and What’s Going on Now? • Near Future Prospects Planetary transits transit in the Solar System transit in exoplanetary systems (we cannot spatially resolve) 2006/11/9 transit of Mercury observed with Hinode slightly dimming The first exoplanetary transits Charbonneau+ (2000) for HD209458b Transiting planets are increasing So far 69 transiting planets have been discovered. Why are transits interesting? We can characterize origin, structure, and environment of respective planets! Scientific Subjects of Transits Ongoing • Mass-Size relation (structure) • The Rossiter-McLaughlin effect (origin) • Transmission Spectroscopy (environment) • Secondary Eclipses (environment) Near Future • Transit Timing Variations • Exo-Rings and Exo-Moons Mass-Size Relation (too inflated) HAT-P-3 b (heavy core) TrES-4 b, etc Charbonneau et al. (2006) The Rossiter-McLaughlin effect When a transiting planet hides stellar rotation, star planet the planet hides the approaching side → the star appears to be receding planet the planet hides the receding side → the star appears to be approaching radial velocity of the host star would have an apparent anomaly. Transmission Spectroscopy star planet stellar line upper atmosphere dimming with excess absorption A tiny part of starlight passes through planetary atmosphere. Secondary Eclipse provide information of thermal emissions of the dayside secondary eclipse secondary eclipse transit IRAC 8μm transit Knutson et al. (2007) Transit Timing Variations (TTV) perturbing but not transiting planet (or exo-moon) orbit of transiting planet observer observer Exo-Rings and Exo-Moons Taken by the Cassini spacecraft on September 15, 2006 (Credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute) Summary of Recent News 1. Discoveries of transiting super earths 2. Discoveries of highly tilted transiting planets 3. Kepler launched and recently announced results 4. Possible Transit Timing Variations? 5. Discovery of the largest Saturnian ring 1: Discoveries of Transiting Super Earths and their Meanings First Transiting Super Earth CoRoT-7b CoRoT-7b: Rp=1.7 Rearth Mp=4.8 MEarth CoRoT-7: K0V star, d = 150 pc Leger et al. (2009), Queloz et al. (2009) Second Discovery by MEarth Team GJ1214b: Rp=2.68 REarth Mp=6.55 MEarth GJ1214: M4.5V star, d = 13 pc Charbonneau et al. (2009) Previous Mass-Radius Relation inflated !! HAT-P-3 HD149026 Hartman et al. (2009) Diversity of Jovian Planets (too inflated) HAT-P-3 b (heavy core) TrES-4 b, etc Charbonneau et al. (2006) New Mass-Radius Relation Parameter space now comes to Earth-like region H+He pure H2O Diversity of Earth-like planets H2O dominated Earth-like Charbonneau et al. (2009) 2: Discoveries of Highly Tilted Planets and their Meanings Do Such Planets Exist? Stellar Spin Planetary Orbit Semi-Major Axis Distribution of Exoplanets Snow line Jupiter Eccentricity Distribution Eccentric Planets Jupiter Standard Migration Models Type I and II migration mechanisms consider gravitational interaction between proto-planetary disk and planets • Type I: less than 10 Earth mass proto-planets • Type II: more massive case (Jovian planets) well explain the semi-major axis distribution e.g., a series of Ida & Lin papers predict small eccentricities and small inclination for migrated planets Migration Models for Eccentric Planets consider gravitational interaction between planet-planet (planet-planet scattering models) planet-binary companion (Kozai migration) may be able to explain eccentricity distribution e.g., Nagasawa+ 2008, Chatterjee+ 2008 predict a variety of eccentricities and also misalignments between stellar-spin and planetary-orbital axes ejected planet The Rossiter-McLaughlin effect reflects the trajectory of planetary orbit in front of stellar surface well aligned misaligned (tilted) Radial velocity during transits = Keplerian motion + Rossiter effect Gaudi & Winn (2007) Previous studies of the RM effect 1. HD209458 Queloz+ 2000, Winn+ 2005 2. HD189733 Winn+ 2006 Red: Eccentric 3. TrES-1 Narita+ 2007 4. HAT-P-2 Winn+ 2007, Loeillet+ 2008 Blue: Binary 5. HD149026 Wolf+ 2007 6. HD17156 Narita+ 2008,2009, Cochran+ 2008, Barbieri+ 2009 7. TrES-2 Winn+ 2008 8. CoRoT-2 Bouchy+ 2008 9. XO-3 Hebrard+ 2008, Winn+ 2009 10. HAT-P-1 Johnson+ 2008 11. HD80606 Moutou+ 2009, Pont+ 2009, Winn+ 2009 12. WASP-14 Joshi+ 2008, Johnson+ 2009 13. HAT-P-7 Narita+ 2009, Winn+ 2009 14. CoRoT-3 Triaud+ 2009 15. WASP-17 Anderson+ 2010 16. CoRoT-1 Pont+ 2010 17. WASP-3 Simpson+ 2010 18. Kepler-8 Jenkins+ 2010 19. TrES-4 Narita+ to be submitted 20. HAT-P-13 Winn+ to be submitted Green: Both Summary of RM Studies 4 out of 7 eccentric planets have highly tilted orbits tilted planetary orbits may be common for eccentric planets 3 out of 13 non-eccentric planets also show tilted orbits spin-orbit misalignements are rare for non-eccentric planets we can add samples to learn a statistical population of alinged/misaligned/retrograde planets 2 out of 20 transiting planets show retrograde orbits Distribution of spin-orbit alignment angles would be useful to test planetary migration models 3: Kepler launched in 2009 and recently announced results Beginning of the Kepler Era Kepler launched on March 6, 2009 Just before the 5th Exoplanet Conference in Kona Kepler website First result announced in August 2009 heat transfer albedo Kepler website Kepler website Kepler Started Exploration • large number of Jovian, Neptunian, Earth-like planets will be discovered Mass-Radius Distribution Spin-Orbit Alignment Distribution Albedo Heat Transfer Many theoretical studies will be stimulated! By the way… Kepler can determine transit times of transiting planets precisely. What can we do with the Kepler data. 4: Observations of Transit Timing Variations and Near Future Prospects Transit Timing Variations (TTV) perturbing but not transiting planet (or exo-moon) orbit of transiting planet observer observer Theoretical Studies • For another planet: – Agol et al. (2005) / Holman & Murray (2005) – a few min for a hot Jupiter having an earth-mass planet in 2:1 resonance orbit – If an earth-mass planet exists around a hot Jupiter, even ground-based telescope would be able to detect TTV • For exo-moon: – Kipping 2009a, 2009b, Kipping et al. (2009) – Exo-moons would be detectable with the Kepler Likely First Discovery of TTV O-C [min] an Earth-mass planet in 4:1 resonant orbit? 1 0 -1 -2 case of no TTV 266 366 Transit Epoch 446 Transit timing of OGLE-TR-111b (Diaz et al. 2008) and TTV in this system is ongoing. Kepler will discover numbers of additional planets and exo-moons with TTV! 5: Discovery of the Largest Saturnian Ring and Implication for Exo-Ring Exploration Exo-Rings and Exo-Moons Enceladus Earth Taken by the Cassini spacecraft on September 15, 2006 (Credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute) Methodology of Ring Detection • Transit light curves for ringed planets are slightly different from those for no-ring planets • Residuals between observed light curves and theoretical planetary light curves are ring signals • Signals are typically ~10-4 level – Detectable with HST/Kepler • We can learn configuration of rings with high precision photometry Barnes & Fortney (2004) Discovery of the Largest Saturnian Ring Largest ring extended from 128 RSaturn to 207RSaturn Verbiscer et al. (2009) (Credit: NASA/JPL Caltech/Keck) If we observe the Saturn as a transiting planet, differences of multiband transit light curves are quite large! Characterization of Particle Size of Rings • Diffractive forward-scattering depends on ring’s particle size and causes difference in depth of transit light curve ramp just before and after transits • Multi-wavelength observations would be useful to characterize distribution of particle size • SPICA’s wide wavelength coverage is useful to probe wide variety of particle size Barnes & Fortney (2004) (for 0.5 micron observations) Next Generation Telescopes James Webb Space Telescope after 2014 SPICA after 2018 Thirty Meter Telescope after 2018 Summary Transit observations provide us various interesting information to characterize extrasolar planets! Questions?