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What did we learn from transiting exoplanets? ● Introduction to exoplanets ● Main questions, unsolved problems ● Transiting exoplanets Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University Looking back ... The idea of exoplanets and extraterrestrial life has been around for 2300+ years ● ● ● ● Aristarchus of Samos (310—230 BC): heliocentric view, stars are suns Epicurus (341–270 BC): suggested that the universe is filled with other worlds where extraterrestrial life is possible. Giordano Bruno (1584): “There are innumerable suns and an infinite number of planets which circle around their suns as our seven planets circle around our Sun.” Christiaan Huygens (1698): “What a wonderful and amazing Scheme have we here of the magnificent Vastness of the Universe! So many Suns, so many Earths... “ “Planets that surround that prodigious number of Suns […] must have their plants and animals, and their rational creatures too, and those as great admirers, and as diligent observers of the heavens as ourselves ... “ Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University Looking back ... The idea of exoplanets and extraterrestrial life has been around for 2300+ years, which is >100 generations. The discovery of exoplanets happened during our generation. Note characters in red, and be a careful observer of details. Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University The first exoplanets • Via radial velocity observations, using moderately precise spectrographs • Initial aim: substellar objects, brown dwarfs, or provide RV standards for the IAU. RV precision reached 10—20 m/s. • Campbell, Walker, 1988: Gamma Cephei, P=2.7yr, 1.7MJ. Very cautious announcement. • Latham et al. 1989, reported P = 84d, 11MJ companion to HD114762. Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University Are there planets closer in? Struve, 1952. Also on ADS. Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University 51 Peg ● ● Doppler shifts of the star 51 Pegasi indirectly revealed a planet with 4.2-day orbital period. (Mayor & Queloz 1995.) The short period was a real surprise! Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University Probability of transits For Earth, p = 1/200 Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University Transiting exoplanet discoveries • One famous example: HD209458. • 8th magnitude solar type star in Pegasus. • RV variations detected by the Geneva team (Mayor et al) and by the California team (Marcy et al). • Subsequent follow-up by Henry et al, and by Charbonneau et al. Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University How did hot Jupiters get there? • These planets orbit their host stars at every few (Earth) days. • Equilibrium temperatures are ~2000 K. • They could have not formed at their present position: 1) No massive planetary embrio formation inside the ice-line (amount of metals in a protoplanetary nebula is small). 2) No enough material to sweep up to form a massive planet. Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University Main questions regarding exoplanets ● ● ● ● ● How do planets (and other substellar objects ) form? How do planets evolve? Evolution of their orbits and their physical characterisics. What are the physical characteristics of exoplanets, and how do these relate to the properties of their stars? What is the occurrence rate of planets, moons, including Earth-like rocky planets? What is the frequency of life outside Earth? Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University Exoplanet discovery methods • Timing (e.g pulsars) • Reflex motion of the host star (RV) • Transits • Microlensing Wolszczan 1994 Wright et al. 2010 • Direct imaging Marois et al. 2008 Department of Astrophysical Sciences --Gaudi et al 2008, OGLE-2006-BLG-109 Gáspár Bakos Princeton University PSR1257+12 • The following two slides (like many others) were hidden in the original presentation, as delivered on June 30, due to time constraints. Nevertheless, in order to address criticism by Prof. Kulkarni, they are shown in this PDF printout. • Note1: while these pulsar planets are indeed reach super-Earth masses, little is known about them, such as radii, temperatures, composition, etc, thus I maintain the view that it is important to search for low mass/radius planets around stars. Note2: my talk also misses microlensing results, again, on purpose, due to lack of time, and mismatch of context. This is not a general overview of exoplanets. • Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University PSR1257+12 • • • Rotation rate: 6.22 milliseconds (9,650 rpm!) Original discovery: two planets. Minimum masses 2.8 and 3.4 earth masses, distances from the pulsar are 0.47 AU and 0.36 AU, almost circular orbits with periods of 98.2 and 66.6 days Arecibo, Puerto Rico Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University PSR1257+12 • • • • One more planet found in 1994 (0.02 Earth mass = Moon!) And another in 2002 (0.0004 Earth mass, which is a Ceres-mass body!) Formation of planets probably after the explosion. Only two other pulsars are known to harbor planets (PSR B1620-26 b, PSR B1719-14 b) Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University Schematics of an exoplanet transit Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University In the meantime … the radial velocity of the star also varies Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University 1. Planetary masses, radii Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University Inflated planets Inflated with respect to theoretical model predictions. Explanations include: • Eccentricity tides • Obliquity tides • High atmospheric opacity • Thermal tides • Ohmic dissipation of electrical currents • … etc. Howard 2013, Science Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University On the migration of hot Jupiters → Hot Jupiters must have migrated in. How? • 1. Slow (called Type-II) migration? • 2. Gravitational planet-planet scattering. • 3. Kozai cycles: interaction due to an outer, massive companion (such as a stellar binary companion). • How could we decide which mechanism is the typical (for a given system, or in general)? Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University How can we distinguish between these formation and migration scenarios? • → through the inclination between the stellar spin axis and the planetary orbital normal. • Type-II migration → would dampen mutual inclinations. • Gravitational planet-planet scattering → broad range of inclinations. • Kozai cycles: interaction due to an outer, massive companion (such as a stellar binary companion) → very broad range of inclinations. • We think that the close alignment of planetary orbital normals and Sun spin axis follows from the SS formation from a spinning protostellar/planetary nebula. • Gross misalignments can hint on different formation and evolution scenarios. • How can we measure the inclinations for exoplanetary systems? Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University The Rossiter-McLaughlin (RM) effect • λ = 30 (XO-3b) • λ = 165 (HAT-P-6b) Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University Hot stars with hot Jupiters have high obliquities Albrecht et al, 2012 • Teff >6250 K → preferentially misaligned • Retrograde → M < 3MJ? • M>8MJ → misaligned? •Somehow related to tidal dissipation timescales? Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University How can we distinguish between these formation and migration scenarios? • → through finding perturbing companions, aka “cold friends of hot Jupiters” that may have been responsible for the migration of these planets. • long term radial velocity monitoring • high resolution imaging. • >10% of hot jupiters have such “cold friends” Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University Secondary eclipses = occultations Occultation: when the planet goes behind the star. • Small drop in overall flux. Reflected light + thermal emission. • Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University Occultations • HD189733b: a famous transiting extrasolar planet. • P = 2.2d , M = 1.1 MJ, R = 1.1 RJ around a K dwarf star. A classical hot Jupiter. • Star has a small and faint M dwarf companion. • Curiously, it is right next (towards) the Dumbbell nebula. Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University 3. Occultations → brightness temperatures • The contrast (flux ratio) between the planet and the star does depend on the wavelength, even in the IR domain. • Broadly speaking, the contrast increases as we move to longer wavelength. • Primary reason: the RJ tail is an approximation. In reality, these are ~Planck-curves. Further departures are due to the planetary atmosphere, clouds, etc. Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University 4. Thermal brightness maps HD189733b is tidally locked, i.e. showing the same face towards the star. • It has a hot spot, not exactly facing the star, but somewhat 'behind'. This is due to atmospheric circulation on the planet. • Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University 5. Occultation in visible light → albedo HAT-P-7b Kepler observations (in visible light, close to the peak intensity of the host star) reveal the occultation due to the planet. • This is the reflected light from the planet! (Not infrared thermal emission). • Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University TrES-2b: the darkest 'world' • Kepler observations in visible light reveal the occultation due to the planet. • Depth is 5 parts-per-million (ppm). 3.5-sigma result. Kipping & Spiegel 2012 Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University Cloud maps of Kepler-7b Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University Transmission spectroscopy Starlight shining through the planetary atmosphere. • Note the discovery of Venus' atmosphere during the 1769 transit! • Planet atmosphere absorbs light in particular wavelengths, depending on its composition! • From Michael Perryman Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University Transmission spectroscopy • Equivalent to the planet appearing 'larger' during transit in selected bandpasses (i.e. transit being deeper in certain wavelengths). Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University Composition of atmospheres • Transmission spectrum for HD189733b • Combination of many observations. • Solid lines show theoretical models. Observations are indicated by points and error-bars. • Various elements (Na) and molecules (water, methane) have been detected. • Detections and their significance have been subject to intense debate. See e.g. 2014ApJ...784..133S Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University High resolution ground-based spectroscopy of (transiting) exoplanets Molecular absorption in exoplanet atmospheres, both in night side (transmission) and dayside (thermal emission) spectra. Other systems inculde: HD189733b orbital motion in CO absorption, de Kok et al 2013 Tau Boo b, 51 Peg b: CO HD209458b orbital motion in CO transmission, Snellen et al 2009 Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University Planet occurrence rates • df(R)/dlogR = 3 * R-2 • HJ are extremely rare (1% of stars have a HJ) • Small and long period planets are frequent • df(M)/dlogM ~ M-0.5 • Giant planets: f ~ metal content and mass of host star Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University eta Earth • Petigura et al. 2013, ApJ, based on Kepler: “We find that 15.1^{+1.8}_{-2.7}% of solar type stars—roughly one in six—has a 1-2 R_E planet with P = 5-50 days. “ • Petigura et al. 2013, PNAS, based on Kepler: “Extrapolating, one finds 5.7^{+1.7}_{-2.2}% of Sun-like stars harbor an Earth-size planet with orbital periods of 200-400 d. “ • Marcy, 2014, PNAS: “Defining habitable zones remains difficult” • Foreman-Mackey et al. 2014, "We find that the rate density of Earth analogs is about 0.02 (per star per natural logarithmic bin in period and radius) with large uncertainty. This number is much smaller than previous estimates made with the same data but stronger assumptions. “ Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University Circumbinary planets: Kepler-16b • The first Tatooine (circumbinary planet). • Star Wars! • Science is stranger and weirder than fiction (can even think of). • P=229d Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University Kepler-47b,c www.youtube.com/watch?v=dLGhkwfyb70 Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University Current census: 1800 planets Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University The Kepler orrery • The Kepler orrery by Dan Fabrycky (multiple transiting Kepler systems). Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University • www.youtube.com/watch?v=gnZVvYm6KKM The TESS project • TESS: Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite • Observe 500K bright stars at 0.5 mmag precision (9min), 27d timespan, 1min cadence. • All sky survey • Expected to find ~2700 TEPs, with ~300 SuperEarths • Targets much brighter than Kepler and Corot • TESS + VLT/GMT/TMT/ELT, TESS + JWST: where, how, when to look • VLT/HARPS-N/E-ELT: radial velocity, mass determination, excluding blend scenarios • JWST: IR transmission spectroscopy, CO2, H2O Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University JWST Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University What will we learn from transiting planets? Further physical characteristics, such as ➔ composition of atmospheres, including clouds ➔ spin of planets (rate, direction) ➔ volcanism ➔ rings ➔ oblateness of planets • Formation and migration of planets (in progress) via e.g. measuring the orbital tilts for more planets • Frequency and nature of exomoons • Abundance of life in the Universe ➔ Gáspár Bakos Department of Astrophysical Sciences --- Princeton University