What stellar properties can be learnt from planetary transits Adriana Válio Roque da Silva...

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What stellar properties can be learnt from planetary transits Adriana Válio Roque da Silva CRAAM/Mackenzie

Transcript of What stellar properties can be learnt from planetary transits Adriana Válio Roque da Silva...

Page 1: What stellar properties can be learnt from planetary transits Adriana Válio Roque da Silva CRAAM/Mackenzie.

What stellar properties can be learnt from planetary transits

Adriana Válio Roque da SilvaCRAAM/Mackenzie

Page 2: What stellar properties can be learnt from planetary transits Adriana Válio Roque da Silva CRAAM/Mackenzie.

Sumary Star:

– Atmospheric structure– Spots: size, temperature, latitude of occurrence– Mass– Radius

Planet:– Radius– Distance to the star– Orbit inclination angle– Orbital period

Simple test: secondary is a planet or a star?

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Mercury transits

Mercury transit on November 15, 1999, that lasted about 1 hour.

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Vênus transit – 8 June 2004

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Exoplanets

133 planets detected by radial velocities

4 planets first detected by transits

Data:– HD 209458: high resolution data from HST– OGLE: over a hundred candidates, 4

confirmed by radial velocities (56,111,113,132)

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Model Star white light image

of the Sun Planet opaque disk of

radius r/Rs

Transit: at each time the planet is centered at a given position in its orbit (aorb/Rs and i) calculate the integrated flux

Search in parameter space for the best values of r, aorb, and i (minimum 2)

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Transit Simulation

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Property 1: Limb darkening(Atmosphere)

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Atmospheric profile

HST data for HD209458 (Brown et al. 2001) not well fit by the solar limb darkening, which is a linear function of =cos.instead it is best described by a quadratic function of ;

HD 209458

linear

quadratic

221 )1()1(1

)1(

)( ww

I

I

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Limb darkening

Temperature gradient not as steep as in the solar photosphere

quadratic

linear

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Property 2: Spots – size, temperature, and latitude

(indicator of stellar activity)

Silva ApJLetters, 585, 147, 2004

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Sunspots

Regions of high concentration of magnetic fields; Indicators of magnetic activity cycle; Understanding of solar activity:

– solar flares, coronal mass ejections, etc; Currently it is not possible to detect, let alone

monitor the behavior of solar like spots on other stars due to their very small sizes.

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Solar Transit Simulation

transit

sunspots

A white light image of the Sun is used to simulate the transit of a planet in front of a group of sunspots, that is, an active region. Two simulations are performed: one for an Earth sized planet and another the size of HD 209458b (1,347 RJup).

Page 14: What stellar properties can be learnt from planetary transits Adriana Válio Roque da Silva CRAAM/Mackenzie.

Simulation results

sunspot eclipse

Small variations in the lightcurve during the planetary transit can be seen when the planet occults dark regions on the solar disk, i.e., sunspots.

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Model star Star represented by a

quadratic limb darkening with w1=0.2925 and w2=0.3475 (Brown et al. 2001).

Spot modeled by three parameters:– Intensity, as a function

of stellar intensity at disk center (max);

– Size, as a function of planet radius;

– Position, as a distance to the transit line in units of planet radius.

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The Model

Planet in a circular orbit around HD 209458 with a period of 3.5247 days, major semi-axis of 0.0467 AU, and inclination angle, i=86,68.

Planet radius = 1.347 RJup, and stellar radius = 1.146 RSun.

The planet is represented by an opaque disk that crosses the stellar disk at 30.45° latitude (corresponding to i=86,68).

The planet position is calculated every two minutes.

Lightcurve intensity at every two minutes is the sum of all the pixels values in the image.

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Data

Two observations with “bumps” in the light curve were used: Deeg et al. (2001) Brown et al. (2001) -

HST

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HD209458 (Deeg et al. 2001)

Transit with spots without spots

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HD209458 (Brown et al. 2001)

Transit with spots without spots

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Results

Starspot temperature, T0, estimated from blackbody emission, where Te is the stellar surface temperature assumed to be 6000+50 K (Mazeh et al. 2000):

Starspot temperatures between 4900-5000 K.

SPOTS 26-jul-2000 25-apr-2000

Radius (Rp) 0.4-0.6 0.3-0.4

Intensity (Istar) 0.4-0.6 0.5-0.7

Distance to transit line (Rp)

0.5-0.8 0.7-0.9

Rp=9.4 104 km

1exp

1exp

o

e

e

o

KTh

KTh

I

I

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Conclusions

This method enables us to estimate the starspots physical parameters.

From modeling HD208458 data, we obtained the starspots characteristics:

sizes of 3-6 104 km, being larger than regular sunspots, usually of the order of 11000 km (probably a group of starspots, similar to solar active regions).

temperatures of 4900 - 5500 K, being hotter than regular sunspots (3800-4400K), however the surface temperature of HD 209458, 6000K, is also hotter than that of the Sun (5770K).

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Property 3: Mass and Radius (distinguish between planetary

and stellar companions)

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OLGE transits

Data from OGLE project

Orbital period taken as the published value

Fit to the data yields:– r/Rs (planet radius)

– Aorb/Rs (orbit radius – assumed circular)

– i (inclination angle)

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Lightcurve: planet radius

Planets with larger radius have deeper transits.

For Jupiter size planets, r=RJ, 2% decrease in intensity for a star with 1 solar radius

r

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Lightcurve: orbital radius

Circular orbitLarger

orbital radius shorter transit phase interval

aorb

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Lightcurve: orbit inclination

Orbit inclination angle close to 90o (a transit is seen)

Smaller inclination angle shorter transit phase interval

i

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Orbit

For circular orbits:

Determine aorb/Rs from best fit of transit phase interval (f) from the data

aorb

ft

P

R

a

s

orb

1

2

2

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Kepler’s 3rd lawAssuming that the secondary is a planet:

Mp << Ms

The ratio Ms1/3/Rs is determined once

aorb/Rs has been obtained.Determine Ms supposing the relation for

main sequence stars (Mihalas 1980):

3

1

2

2

4

PGM

a sorb

7.0

Sun

s

Sun

s

M

M

R

R

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Stellar Mass and Radius

From fit to the data obtain:– aorb//Rs (orbit radius – assumed

circular)Period is knownFrom Kepler’s law and mass-radius

relationship:1.1

1

3

2

2 )/(4

sorbs Ra

PGM

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Simple test: Planet?

Compare stellar mass obtained from the data fit, Mfit=Ms+Mp, with mass from direct observation of star, Ms

If Mfit>>Ms it is NOT a planet In this case the mass is actually the

sum of the mass of both stars, or the mass-radius relationship is not valid

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Results

OGLE Ms (Msun) r (RJ) a (A.U.) I (o)

3 (*) 2.50 2.40 0.030 89.5

1.00 1.4 0.025 90

10 1.10 1.29 0.043 88.1

1.22+0.045

1.52 0.04 87-90

33 (*) 2.00 2.31 0.038 90.0

56 0.90 0.94 0.021 85.4

1.04+0.05 1.23+0.16 0.0225+0.0004

86.5-90

111 0.91 1.13 0.048 89.3

0.82+0.15 1.00+0.13 0.047+0.001

113 0.70 1.07 0.022 88.0

0.77+0.06 1.08+0.07 0.0228+0.0006

85+1

Radial velocitytransit

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Conclusions

From transit observation of secondary objects in front of a star, it is possible to measure:– Ratio of companion to star radii: r/Rs;– Orbital radius (assuming circular orbit) in units

of star radius: aorb/Rs;– Orbital inclination angle, i, and period, P.

Combining Kepler’s 3rd law with a mass-radius relationship (RM0.7) it is possible to infer the mass and radius of the star.

Test: comparing this mass with stellar mass obtained from other observations can infer if companion is a PLANET or not.