spitzer observations of extrasolar planets joseph harrington university of central florida credit:...

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Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC-Caltech)

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Challenge: Direct Observation

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Page 1: Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC- Caltech)

Spitzer Observationsof Extrasolar Planets

Joseph HarringtonUniversity of Central Florida

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Page 2: Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC- Caltech)

● Search for Life?

●Astronomers have been selling life for 400 years! $trong public motivator New phase space for planetary science

Interior composition & dynamicsAtmospheric chemistry (Fe, enstatite clouds)Atmospheric radiative chemodynamics!Orbital dynamics, habitability, formation

Why Study Extrasolar Planets?

© 1997 Warner Bros.

Page 3: Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC- Caltech)

Challenge: Direct Observation

Page 4: Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC- Caltech)

Do the Numbers(R/a)2 is usually very small!

Options: A: Increase t B: Reduce a or increase R by choice of planet C: Increase L or reduce d by choice of star D: Do something smarter than comparing reflected light

Correct answer: E: All of the above!

Page 5: Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC- Caltech)

Trick: Transits!

Brown et al. (2001)

Get i, M, R

Page 6: Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC- Caltech)

Trick: Secondary Eclipses!

Page 7: Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC- Caltech)

Trick: Secondary Eclipses!

Page 8: Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC- Caltech)

Contrast Models

Fortney et al. (2006)

Page 9: Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC- Caltech)

First Measured Photons IDeming, Seager, Richardson, Harrington

Nature 434, 740-743 (2005)

HD 209458 b

Spitzer MIPS, 24 µm,1282 mid-IR array

1696 good images over 6 hours

10-sec exposures

1.5 h pre-eclipse, 3 h eclipse, 1.5 h post-eclipse

Page 10: Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC- Caltech)

Data

Deming et al. (2005b)

Page 11: Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC- Caltech)

HD 209458 b Results

F24 m = 55 ± 10 µJy

FP/F* = 0.0026 ± 0.00046

TB,24 m = 1130 ± 150 K

tSE = t=0 + P/2 ± 7 min

Significant orbital eccentricity very unlikelyInflated radius not likely due to another planet Primary eclipses consistent w/ optical result

(Richardson et al. 2006, ApJ)

Page 12: Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC- Caltech)

First Measured Photons II!Charbonneau et al. submitted TrES-1 the same day!

2 wavelengths (4.5 and 8 µm) simultaneously

IRAC rather than MIPS, aperture photometry

FP/F*: 4.5 µm: 0.00066 ± 0.00013, 8 µm: 0.00225 ± 0.00036

Tb = 1060 ± 50 K

A = 0.31 ± 0.14

e = 0

Cre

dit:

NA

SA /

JPL-

Cal

tech

/ R

. Hur

t (SS

C-C

alte

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Page 13: Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC- Caltech)

New Champ: HD 189733 bAnnounced 2005 Oct 4, Bouchy et al. (French)K1-K2 star (small, cool)Rp = 1.26 RJup (bigish for a hot Jupiter)

Close (19.3 pc), V = 7.67Many times higher S/N than HD 209458 bGood enough for spectroscopy!

Page 14: Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC- Caltech)

HD 189733 b 16 µm Data

Deming et al. (2006)

Page 15: Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC- Caltech)

HD 189733 b is round!Derivative of lightcurve shows planet crossing limbDetect that planet is roundCannot detect difference between uniform and peaked emissionShould be able to with IRAC dataConstrains hot-point lag

Dem

ing

et a

l. 20

06

Page 16: Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC- Caltech)

HD 149026 b: The Exotic PlanetAnnounced 2005 July 1, Sato et al. (Fischer/N2K)Saturn-sized, but much heavier: ~80 M⊕ core!

Large G star → very weak eclipse (0.003 mag)

N2K team, 2005 N2K

team

, 200

5

Page 17: Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC- Caltech)

Spitzer ObservationsPredicted 3-6 in one eclipse, most favorable bandBright star → IRAC 8-µm subarray mode, 3232 pix48,384 frames, 0.4-sec frame rate, 6 hDo not expect to see eclipse in raw data!

Page 18: Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC- Caltech)

Digging

Page 19: Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC- Caltech)

Model

Page 20: Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC- Caltech)

Eclipse!

Page 21: Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC- Caltech)

Temperatures

Extrasolar Planets Encyclopedia, Deming et al. (2006,2005b),Charbonneau et al. (2005a)

Page 22: Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC- Caltech)

Upsilon Andromedae b Team

Joseph Harrington, University of Central Florida, CornellBrad Hansen, UCLAStatia Luszcz, Cornell, UC BerkeleySara Seager, Carnegie Institution of WashingtonDrake Deming, NASA's Goddard Space Flight CenterKristen Menou, ColumbiaJames Y.-K. Cho, Queen Mary, University of LondonL. Jeremy Richardson, NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center

Image and animation: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Robert Hurt

Page 23: Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC- Caltech)

Fire and Ice on Upsilon Andromedae b

● Upsilon Andromedae b: “hot Jupiter” planet

● Observed at 24 m by Spitzer Space Telescope, MIPS instrument (Multiband Imaging Photometer for Spitzer)

● Brightness variation tells us there is a "hot spot" facing the star

● Very different from Jupiter: Huge temperature swings from day to night side (1400 K)

Consistent with 0 phase lag (11 15)

Page 24: Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC- Caltech)
Page 25: Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC- Caltech)

Upsilon Andromedae b Observations

● First measurement of light from a non-transiting extrasolar planet

● First detection of temperature variation on an extrasolar planet

● Birth of exoplanetary meteorology: radiation dominates advection

● More, brighter planets now measurable by Spitzer

● Spitzer pushed well beyond specs

Page 26: Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC- Caltech)

Spitzer SE Spectroscopy

Divide that booming signal into a few hundred channels...But also divide stellar and zodiStare as planet goes behind starHD 209458b (Richardson et al. 2007, Nature)HD 189733b (Grillmair et al. 2007, ApJ)HD 209458b (Swain et al. 2007 submitted)

Page 27: Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC- Caltech)

HD 209458b

2 eclipsesDetect continuumTentatively detect 2 molecular emissions! (first)

Page 28: Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC- Caltech)

HD 189733b

ContinuumNO molecular claimNOTE: Models say won't see water that is there

Page 29: Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC- Caltech)

ConclusionsSpitzer can do more than it was designed to doSpitzer can only do planets around nearby stars!We have one more year of cold SpitzerMost important survey goal this year:FIND ALL THE NEARBY TRANSITING PLANETSGoing forward, no more Hubblephobia:STOP UNDERSPECING INSTRUMENTS!

Pay for what you can get

Page 30: Spitzer Observations of Extrasolar Planets Joseph Harrington University of Central Florida Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hurt (SSC- Caltech)

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