7-9 September 2022
Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics Potsdam (AIP)
Europe/Berlin timezone

Variable atmospheric dynamics of planets experiencing gravity-darkened seasons

7 Sep 2022, 12:30
15m
Lecture Hall (Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics Potsdam (AIP))

Lecture Hall

Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics Potsdam (AIP)

An der Sternwarte 16 14482 Potsdam, Germany
Oral presentation Main conference

Speaker

Anusha Pai Asnodkar (The Ohio State University)

Description

Planets on misaligned orbits around rapid rotators can experience “gravity-darkened seasons” as their orbits cross over the hot poles and cooler equators of rotationally-flattened stars. The periodically variable heating from these seasons presents a unique case for exploring how changes in stellar irradiation influence planetary atmospheric dynamics. We perform a homogeneous analysis of day-to-nightside winds on the ultra-hot Jupiters KELT-9 b and KELT-20 b, enabling the comparison of a planet experiencing gravity-darkened seasons (KELT-9 b) with a similar planet that does not (KELT-20 b). We conduct high-resolution transmission spectroscopy using two transits observed by the PEPSI spectrograph on the Large Binocular Telescope to empirically constrain supersonic ~10 km/s day-to-nightside winds traced by Fe II features in the atmosphere of KELT-9 b. Reconciling our findings with two archival HARPS-N datasets suggests multi-epoch variability ~5-8 km/s over timescales between weeks to years. In contrast, KELT-20 b’s day-to-nightside winds are less rapid (~2 km/s) and stable across four transits collectively observed by PEPSI and HARPS-N. The observed contrast of KELT-9 b’s wind variability and KELT-20 b’s stability is in accordance with our intuition on the effect of gravity-darkened seasons. A qualitative evaluation of our measured wind velocities and variability against current ultra-hot Jupiter GCMs reveals that KELT-9 b poses unique challenges for validating giant planet atmospheric models.

Primary authors

Anusha Pai Asnodkar (The Ohio State University) Prof. Ji Wang (The Ohio State University) Dr Jason Eastman (Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian) Dr P. Wilson Cauley (University of Colorado Boulder,) Prof. B. Scott Gaudi (The Ohio State University) Dr Ilya Ilyin (Leibniz-Institut for Astrophysics Potsdam (AIP)) Dr Klaus Strassmeier (Leibniz-Institut for Astrophysics Potsdam (AIP))

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