1 / 16

MAGNETIC FIELDS OF exoplanetS . FEATURES AND DETECTION

MAGNETIC FIELDS OF exoplanetS . FEATURES AND DETECTION. UCM, 27th May 2014 Enrique Blanco Henríquez. OUTLINE. Magnetospheres of Earth-like exoplanets Dynamo mechanism Hot Jupiters magnetospheres Atmospheric escape from Hot Jupiters Magnetodisks

nadda
Télécharger la présentation

MAGNETIC FIELDS OF exoplanetS . FEATURES AND DETECTION

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. MAGNETIC FIELDS OF exoplanetS. FEATURES AND DETECTION UCM, 27th May 2014 Enrique Blanco Henríquez

  2. OUTLINE • Magnetospheres of Earth-likeexoplanets • Dynamomechanism • Hot Jupitersmagnetospheres • Atmospheric escape from Hot Jupiters • Magnetodisks • Radio emissionrelatedtomagneticfields • far-UV transits • Bow-shocks

  3. Magnetospheres in Earth-likeexoplanets • Magneticfieldsustainedby a dynamomechanism • In spite of majordifferences in structure, composition, and history, most of thesedynamos are thoughtto be maintainedby similar mechanisms: thermal and compositionalconvection in electricallyconductingfluids in theplanetinteriors • Tarter et al. 2007 and Scalo et al. 2007 recommended M-dwarfs as best targets tosearchforexo-Earths. • M-dwarfsmore active thanSun-likestarsplanetswill be exposedtodenserwinds. However, Planets are tidallylocked, are in synchronousrotationand haveweakmagneticmoments(maybenot as weak as wethought) • Earlymodelattempts • Olson & Christensen (2006), independent of rotationrate

  4. Magnetospheres in Earth-likeexoplanets • Nowadays, itisnotknowif F and D changewith time • However, rotationrate can playanimportant role in thenature of the • magneticfield • - Fastrotatorsdipole • - Slowrotatorsmultipole

  5. Magnetospheres in Earth-likeexoplanets • Magneticmomentdependsonitsrotationrate, butalsoonit’schemicalcomposition and theefficiency of convection in its interior (F) • Ωonlymarksifthedynamois dipolar or multipolar, butmagneticmomentstrengthwillnotexplicitlydependonrotation. • Planetsunder extreme conditions, i.e. highlyinhomogeneousheatingorunderverystrongstellarwinds, mayhavetheirmagneticfieldaffected. • Thisisstillwork in progress and a betterunderstanding of the interior structure and energytransportationmechanisms in rockyplanetsisstillnecessary.

  6. Hot JupitersMagnetospheres usual Giants Super-Earths Hot Jupiters

  7. Hot JupitersMagnetospheres • Upperatmospheressubjectedto intense heating and tidalforces • Magneticpressuredominates gas pressure (gas rarified) • High temperaturesgeneratedby EUV heating • Soft X-ray and EUV inducedexpansion of theupperatmosphere • Non-thermal escape: • Ion pick-up • Sputtering • Photo-chemicalenergizing & escape • Electromagnetic ion acceleration • Thermal escape: • Jeans escape – particlesfromtails • Hydrodynamic escape – allparticles

  8. Hot JupitersMagnetospheres- importance of magnetodisk • Hugeamount of Hot Jupiters are efficientlyprotectedagainst extreme plasma and radiationconditions. • Allestimationswerebasedontoosimplifiedmodel. • Itwasconsidered a planetarydipoledominatedmagnetosphereonly • Dipolemagneticfield balances stellarwindrampressure • However, big M isneededforefficientprotection: bigtidallockingsmall M • Specificallyforclose-in exoplanets, new modelisrequired • Strongmassloss of a planetshould lead toformation of a plasma disk • A magnetodiskdomainingmagnetosphere • More complete planetarymagnetospheremodel, • includingthewholecomplex of themagnetosphericelectriccurrentsystems

  9. Hot JupitersMagnetospheres- importance of magnetodisk • Formation of magnetodiskforHot Jupiters • “Sling” model: Dipolemagneticfield drives plasma in co-rotationregimeninsidethe Alfvenicsurface. • “material-escape driven” models • Hydrodynamic escape of plasma. • Dipolar magneticfield provoques a • chargeseparationwhich causes an • electricfield Hall current in • equatorplane.

  10. Hot JupitersMagnetospheres- importance of magnetodisk • ParaboloidMagnetospheircModel (PMM) forHot Jupiters • Key assumption: magnetopauseisapproximatedbyparaboloid of revolutionalongplanet-starline • Planetarymagneticdipole • Magnetotail • Magnetodisk • Magnetopausecurrents • Magneticfield of stellarwind

  11. Radio emissionfromexoplanets • Interactionbetweenthestellarwind and themagnetisedplanetprovoques a reconnectionthatreleasesenergeticelectrons: radio emission Radio Bode’sLaw Detection of cyclotron radio emission (CRE)wouldprovethat theexoplanetismagnetised Electroncyclotronemission frequency: Theradio flux observed at theEarth

  12. Radio emissionfromexoplanets Optimaldynamos in thecores of terrestrialexoplanets: Magneticfieldgeneration and detectability. Driscoll and Olson 2011 • CRE for 32% and 65% CMF exoplanets • Theionosphericcutoff at 10 MHz • sets thelowerfrequencylimitfor • ground-based radio telescopessuch as LOFAR. • LOFAR (LOwFrequencyARray) • It’sispossibletodetect CRE? • Small fluxes • To be detectable with LOFAR, • emissionpowermustincrease • by a 1e3 factor

  13. Measuringplanetarymagneticfieldwithtransitionobservations • Asymmetrybetweentheingress and egress times can be observed in thenear-UV light curve comparedtotheopticalobservations (eg. WASP-12b) • Ledtosuggesttheexistance of a bow-shock surroundingtheplanet’satmosphere. • For a shock todevelop, therelativevelocitybetweentheplanet and thestellar corona must be greaterthan local soundspeed • For a shock to be detected, itmustcompressthe local plasma to a densityhighenough. For a hydrostatic, isothermal corona, the local densityis • Supposethat coronal material fromthestarisnotmagneticallyconfined, so • it can escape in theform of a wind

  14. Measuringplanetarymagneticfieldwithtransitionobservations • Monte Carlo simulationsfor WASP-12b (earlyingress)

  15. Measuringplanetarymagneticfieldwithtransitionobservations • Measuringtheplanetarymagneticfield (Vidotto et al. 2010)

More Related