The TESS Phase Curve of KELT-1b Suggests a High Dayside Albedo

We measured the optical phase curve of the transiting brown dwarf KELT-1b (TOI 1476, Siverd et al. 2012) using data from the TESS spacecraft. We found that KELT-1b shows significant phase variation in the TESS bandpass, with a relatively large phase amplitude of \(234^{+43}_{-44}\) ppm and a seconda...

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Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2020-10
Hauptverfasser: Beatty, Thomas G, Wong, Ian, Fetherolf, Tara, Line, Michael R, Shporer, Avi, Stassun, Keivan G, Ricker, George R, Seager, Sara, Winn, Joshua N, Jenkins, Jon M, Louie, Dana R, Schlieder, Joshua E, Sha, Lizhou, Tenenbaum, Peter, Yahalomi, Daniel A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We measured the optical phase curve of the transiting brown dwarf KELT-1b (TOI 1476, Siverd et al. 2012) using data from the TESS spacecraft. We found that KELT-1b shows significant phase variation in the TESS bandpass, with a relatively large phase amplitude of \(234^{+43}_{-44}\) ppm and a secondary eclipse depth of \(371^{+47}_{-49}\) ppm. We also measured a marginal eastward offset in the dayside hotspot of \(18.3^\circ\pm7.4^\circ\) relative to the substellar point. We detected a strong phase curve signal attributed to ellipsoidal distortion of the host star, with an amplitude of \(399\pm19\) ppm. Our results are roughly consistent with the Spitzer phase curves of KELT-1b (Beatty et al. 2019), but the TESS eclipse depth is deeper than expected. Our cloud-free 1D models of KELT-1b's dayside emission are unable to fit the full combined eclipse spectrum. Instead, the large TESS eclipse depth suggests that KELT-1b may have a significant dayside geometric albedo of \(\mathrm{A}_\mathrm{g}\sim0.5\) in the TESS bandpass, which would agree with the tentative trend between equilibrium temperature and geometric albedo recently suggested by Wong et al. 2020. We posit that if KELT-1b has a high dayside albedo, it is likely due to silicate clouds (Gao et al. 2020) that form on KELT-1b's nightside (Beatty et al. 2019, Keating et al. 2019) and are subsequently transported onto the western side of KELT-1b's dayside hemisphere before breaking up.
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.2006.10292