New Technique to Study Clouds on Exoplanets Developed by Researchers at MIT

Artist's conception of clouds on Kepler-7b. Image Credit: NASA (edited by Jose-Luis Olivares/MIT)
Artist’s conception of clouds on Kepler-7b. Image Credit: NASA (edited by Jose-Luis Olivares/MIT)

While exoplanets are now being discovered by the thousands, it is still a painstaking process to determine any specific details about them, since they are so incredibly far away. However, astronomers have been devising new techniques to do just that, including one that makes it easier to analyze the property of clouds on some of these distant worlds.

The new technique was developed by a team of researchers at MIT, in the Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences (EAPS). The paper, soon to be published in the Astrophysical Journal, uses data from the Kepler space telescope. The team is led by Kerri Cahoy, an assistant professor of aeronautics and astronautics at MIT.

Comparison of Kepler-7b with Jupiter. The clouds of this "hot Jupiter" were first mapped in 2013. Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MIT
Comparison of Kepler-7b with Jupiter. The clouds of this “hot Jupiter” were first mapped in 2013. Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MIT

In the paper, the team focused on the exoplanet Kepler-7b, a “hot Jupiter” which is about 1.5 times larger than Jupiter but has only half the mass. It orbits close to its star, Kepler-7, in only five days. Kepler-7 is in the constellation Lyra, between 1,000 – 1,400 light-years from Earth.

The researchers examined the light signal coming from Kepler-7b, based on the fact that by studying the amount of light coming from such exoplanets during transits of their star, clouds could be detected. Models of the planet’s atmospheric pressure and temperature were used to determine what types of clouds might form in that atmosphere.

“We then used those cloud models to determine how light would reflect off the atmosphere of the planet (for each type of cloud), and tried to match these possibilities to the actual observations from the Kepler mission itself,” said lead author Matthew Webber. “So we ran a large set of models, to see which models fit best statistically to the observations.”

The resulting data indicated that the clouds would likely be composed of vaporized silicates and magnesium—a lot different than clouds on Earth. This is due to the extremely high temperatures on Kepler-7b, where these minerals would be turned into vapor high up in the atmosphere, and then form clouds as they cooled and condensed at lower altitudes.

The new techniques being developed will help astronomers to study the atmospheres and clouds of many exoplanets in the years to come. Image Credit: NASA/Ames/JPL-Caltech
The new techniques being developed will help astronomers study the atmospheres and clouds of many exoplanets in the years to come. Image Credit: NASA/Ames/JPL-Caltech

According to Heather Knutson, an assistant professor of planetary science at Caltech: “Their models indicate that the clouds on this planet are most likely made from liquid rock. This may sound exotic, but this planet is a roasting hot gas-giant planet orbiting very close to its host star, and we should expect that it might look quite different than our own Jupiter.”

The clouds would cover about half of the planet’s day side; Kepler-7b is tidally locked, so the same side of the planet always faces its star, similar to how the same side of the Moon always faces the Earth.

The clouds of Kepler-7b had been first mapped in 2013, but the new data provides more information about their composition.

According to Cahoy: “We are really doing nothing more complicated than putting a telescope into space and staring at a star with a camera. Then we can use what we know about the universe, in terms of temperatures and pressures, how things mix, how they stratify in an atmosphere, to try to figure out what mix of things would be causing the observations that we’re seeing from these very basic instruments.”

Artist's conception of the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) space telescope, due to be launched in 2017. Image Credit: Chet Beals/MIT Lincoln Lab
Artist’s conception of the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) space telescope, due to be launched in 2017. Image Credit: Chet Beals/MIT Lincoln Lab

Knowing more about clouds on Kepler-7b, or other exoplanets, can also help astronomers to understand the atmosphere better as a whole. As team member Nikole Lewis noted, “It’s one of the few methods out there that can help you determine if a planet even has an atmosphere, for example.” The characteristics of any cloud cover could also affect a planet’s potential habitability (although in Kepler-7b’s case, it is too hot for that anyway). “So right now we are looking at these big gas-giant planets because they give us a stronger signal,” she says. “But the same methodology could be applied to smaller planets, to help us determine if a planet is habitable or not,” Lewis added.

A good example of this is in our own Solar System. Venus is almost the same size and mass of Earth, but its thick cloud cover and carbon dioxide atmosphere have rendered it virtually uninhabitable by Earthly standards, with temperatures hot enough to melt lead and crushing pressures at the surface.

The researchers are hoping to use the new technique with data from the upcoming Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) mission, which will search more stars than Kepler can for more exoplanets.

“TESS is the follow-up to Kepler, led by principal investigator George Ricker, a senior research scientist in the MIT Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research. It will essentially be taking similar measurements to Kepler, but of different types of stars,” Cahoy said. “Kepler was tasked with staring at one group of stars, but there are a lot of stars, and TESS is going to be sampling the brightest stars across the whole sky.”

New techniques such as this should help astronomers study the atmospheres and clouds of many exoplanets in the years to come, bringing us closer to determining how many other habitable worlds may be out there.

 

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