In studying a unique class of ultra-hot exoplanets, NASA Hubble Space Telescope astronomers may be in the mood for dancing to the Calypso party song "Hot, Hot, Hot." That's because these bloated Jupiter-sized worlds are so precariously close to their parent star they are being roasted at seething temperatures above 3,000 degrees Fahrenheit. That's hot enough to vaporize most metals, including titanium. They have the hottest planetary atmospheres ever seen.
In two new papers, teams of Hubble astronomers are reporting
on bizarre weather conditions on these sizzling worlds. It's raining vaporized
rock on one planet, and another one has its upper atmosphere getting hotter
rather than cooler because it is being "sunburned" by intense
ultraviolet (UV) radiation from its star.
This research goes beyond simply finding weird and
quirky planet atmospheres. Studying extreme weather gives astronomers better
insights into the diversity, complexity, and exotic chemistry taking place in
far-flung worlds across our galaxy.
"We still don't have a good
understanding of weather in different planetary environments," said David
Sing of the Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland, co-author on two
studies being reported. "When you look at Earth, all our weather
predictions are still finely tuned to what we can measure. But when you go to a
distant exoplanet, you have limited predictive powers because you haven't built
a general theory about how everything in an atmosphere goes together and
responds to extreme conditions. Even though you know the basic chemistry and
physics, you don't know how it's going to manifest in complex ways."
In a paper in the April 7 journal Nature, astronomers describe Hubble observations of WASP-178b, located about
1,300 light-years away. On the daytime side the atmosphere is cloudless, and is
enriched in silicon monoxide gas. Because one side of the planet permanently faces
its star, the torrid atmosphere whips around to the nighttime side at
super-hurricane speeds exceeding 2,000 miles per hour. On the dark side, the
silicon monoxide may cool enough to condense into rock that rains out of
clouds, but even at dawn and dusk, the planet is hot enough to vaporize rock.
"We knew we had seen something really interesting with this silicon
monoxide feature," said Josh Lothringer of the Utah Valley University in
Orem, Utah.
In a paper published in the January 24 issue of Astrophysical Journal
Letters, Guangwei Fu of the University of
Maryland, College Park, reported on a super-hot Jupiter, KELT-20b, located
about 400 light-years away. On this planet a blast of ultraviolet light from
its parent star is creating a thermal layer in the atmosphere, much like
Earth's stratosphere. "Until now we never knew how the host star affected
a planet's atmosphere directly. There have been lots of theories, but now we
have the first observational data," Fu said.
By comparison, on Earth, ozone in the atmosphere
absorbs UV light and raises temperatures in a layer between 7 to 31 miles above
Earth's surface. On KELT-20b the UV radiation from the star is heating metals
in the atmosphere which makes for a very strong thermal inversion layer.
Evidence came from Hubble's detection of water in
near-infrared observations, and from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope's detection
of carbon monoxide. They radiate through the hot, transparent upper atmosphere
that is produced by the inversion layer. This signature is unique from what
astronomers see in the atmospheres of hot-Jupiters orbiting cooler stars, like
our Sun. "The emission spectrum for KELT-20b is quite different from other
hot-Jupiters," said Fu. "This is compelling evidence that planets
don't live in isolation but are affected by their host star."
Though super-hot Jupiters are uninhabitable, this kind
of research helps pave the way to better understanding the atmospheres of
potentially inhabitable terrestrial planets. "If we can't figure out
what's happening on super-hot Jupiters where we have reliable solid
observational data, we're not going to have a chance to figure out what's
happening in weaker spectra from observing terrestrial exoplanets," said
Lothringer. "This is a test of our techniques that allows us to build a
general understanding of physical properties such as cloud formation and atmospheric
structure."
The Hubble Space Telescope is a project of
international cooperation between NASA and ESA (European Space Agency). NASA's
Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, manages the telescope. The
Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) in Baltimore, Maryland, conducts
Hubble science operations. STScI is operated for NASA by the Association of
Universities for Research in Astronomy, in Washington, D.C.
Illustration
of KELT-20b Credit: NASA, ESA, Leah Hustak (STScI)
Source: Hubble
Probes Extreme Weather on Ultra-Hot Jupiters | NASA
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