Spatially Resolved Modeling of Optical Albedos for a Sample of Six Hot Jupiters

Author:

Adams Danica J.ORCID,Kataria TiffanyORCID,Batalha Natasha E.ORCID,Gao PeterORCID,Knutson Heather A.ORCID

Abstract

Abstract Optical secondary eclipse measurements made by Kepler reveal a diverse set of geometric albedos for hot Jupiters with equilibrium temperatures between 1550 and 1700 K. The presence or absence of high-altitude condensates, such as Mg2SiO4, Fe, Al2O3, and TiO2, can significantly alter optical albedos, but these clouds are expected to be confined to localized regions in the atmospheres of these tidally locked planets. Here, we present 3D general circulation models and corresponding cloud and albedo maps for six hot Jupiters with measured optical albedos in this temperature range. We find that the observed optical albedos of K2-31b and K2-107b are best matched by either cloud-free models or models with relatively compact cloud layers, while Kepler-8b’s and Kepler-17b’s optical albedos can be matched by moderately extended (f sed = 0.1) parametric cloud models. HATS-11b has a high optical albedo, corresponding to models with bright Mg2SiO4 clouds extending to very low pressures (f sed = 0.03). We are unable to reproduce Kepler-7b’s high albedo, as our models predict that the dayside will be dominated by dark Al2O3 clouds at most longitudes. We compare our parametric cloud model with a microphysical cloud model. We find that even after accounting for the 3D thermal structure, no single cloud model can explain the full range of observed albedos within the sample. We conclude that a better knowledge of the vertical mixing profiles, cloud radiative feedback, cloud condensate properties, and atmospheric metallicities is needed in order to explain the unexpected diversity of albedos in this temperature range.

Funder

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Publisher

American Astronomical Society

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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