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WARM SPITZER PHOTOMETRY OF THREE HOT JUPITERS: HAT-P-3b, HAT-P-4b AND HAT-P-12b.

Authors :
TODOROV, KAMEN O.
DEMING, DRAKE
KNUTSON, HEATHER A.
BURROWS, ADAM
FORTNEY, JONATHAN J.
LEWIS, NIKOLE K.
COWAN, NICOLAS B.
AGOL, ERIC
DESERT, JEAN-MICHEL
SADA, PEDRO V.
CHARBONNEAU, DAVID
LAUGHLIN, GREGORY
LANGTON, JONATHAN
SHOWMAN, ADAM P.
Source :
Astrophysical Journal; 6/20/2013, Vol. 770 Issue 2, p1-13, 13p
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

We present Warm Spitzer/IRAC secondary eclipse time series photometry of three short-period transiting exoplanets, HAT-P-3b, HAT-P-4b and HAT-P-12b, in both the available 3.6 and 4.5μm bands. HAT-P-3b and HAT-P-4b are Jupiter-mass objects orbiting an early K and an early G dwarf star, respectively. For HAT-P-3b we find eclipse depths of 0.112%<subscript>-0.030%</subscript><superscript>+0.015%</superscript>(3.6μm) and 0.094%<subscript>-0.009%</subscript><superscript>+0.016%</superscript>(4.5μm). The HAT-P-4b values are 0.142%<subscript>-0.016%</subscript><superscript>+0.014%</superscript>(3.6μm) and 0.122%<subscript>-0.014%</subscript><superscript>+0.012%</superscript>(4.5μm). The two planets' photometry is consistent with inefficient heat redistribution from their day to night sides (and low albedos), but it is inconclusive about possible temperature inversions in their atmospheres. HAT-P-12b is a Saturn-mass planet and is one of the coolest planets ever observed during secondary eclipse, along with the hot Neptune GJ 436b and the hot Saturn WASP-29b. We are able to place 3σ upper limits on the secondary eclipse depth of HAT-P-12b in both wavelengths: <0.042% (3.6μm) and <0.085% (4.5μm).We discuss these results in the context of the Spitzer secondary eclipse measurements of GJ 436b and WASP-29b. It is possible that we do not detect the eclipses of HAT-P-12b due to high eccentricity, but find that weak planetary emission in these wavelengths is a more likely explanation. We place 3σ upper limits on the ∣e cos ω∣ quantity (where e is eccentricity and ω is the argument of periapsis) for HAT-P-3b (<0.0081) and HAT-P-4b (<0.0042), based on the secondary eclipse timings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0004637X
Volume :
770
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Astrophysical Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
90179190
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/770/2/102