Figure
1: Artist’s impression of CoRoT-2b - a hot-Jupiter being blasted by intense
radiation from its parent star. Credit: NASA/CXC/M.Weiss.
Hot-Jupiters
are a class of Jupiter-sized exoplanets that orbit very close to their parent
stars and receive intense amounts of stellar radiation. A typical hot-Jupiter
orbits its parent star at ~1/20th the Sun-Earth distance and receives ~10,000
times more radiation that Jupiter does from the Sun. Being so close to its
parent star, a hot-Jupiter is expected to be tidally-locked whereby one side
continuously faces it parent star while the other side points away into the
darkness of space. A study done by Daniel Fabrycky (2008) shows that reradiated
thermal radiation from a hot-Jupiter carries away momentum and this can
gradually change the star-planet separation distance by ~1 percent over the
planet’s lifetime. For more extreme cases, this change can be as much as a few
percent.
Radiation
is comprised of photons which carry momentum. As a result, a force is exerted
on a planet when radiation is reflected, absorbed or reradiated by the planet.
Radiation that is reflected or absorbed by a hot-Jupiter simply pushes it away
from its parent star. However, the direction of force exerted on a hot-Jupiter
by reradiated thermal radiation is more complicated. Three-dimensional models
suggest that the hottest region on a hot-Jupiter is unlikely to lie at the
planet’s substellar point. Instead, the hottest region is displaced eastward by
a superrotating wind. This causes reradiated thermal radiation from a
hot-Jupiter to be emitted in a preferential direction and thus acts as a
radiative thruster which adds angular momentum to the planet, pushing it into a
wider orbit around its parent star.
Figure
2: The force vectors due to radiation asymmetry as a function of orbital
position for the HAT-P-2b - a hot-Jupiter in an eccentric 5.63-day orbit around
a star that is slightly bigger and hotter than the Sun. Credit: Daniel Fabrycky
(2008).
The
radiative thruster effect is amplified for hot-Jupiters that orbit closer than
typical to their parent stars or for hot-Jupiters with inflated cross-sectional
areas. For example, OGLE-TR-56b is a hot-Jupiter which orbits in a very tight
1.21-day orbit around its parent star. As a consequence, the stupendous amount
of stellar radiation received by OGLE-TR-56b amplifies the radiative thruster
effect. The result is an estimated increase in the star-planet separation
distance of OGLE-TR-56b by ~5 percent over the planet’s lifetime.
This
study shows that the intense radiation received and reradiated by a close-in
exoplanet can change the planet’s orbit over its lifetime. Although the study
done by Daniel Fabrycky (2008) considered only hot-Jupiters, the radiative
thruster effect is expected to be more pronounced for Earth-sized rocky planets
in close-in orbits around their parent stars. A number of such exoplanets have
already been discovered, and they include planets such as Kepler-10b and KIC
8435766b. These terrestrial-sized planets are likely to have a smaller
cross-section per unit mass than hot-Jupiters and are likely to be more
influenced by the radiative thruster effect.
Reference:
Daniel
Fabrycky (2008), “Radiative Thrusters on Close-in Extrasolar Planets”, arXiv:0803.1839
[astro-ph]