Inferring planetary obliquity using rotational and orbital photometry

The obliquity of a terrestrial planet is an important clue about its formation and critical to its climate. Previous studies using simulated photometry of Earth show that continuous observations over most of a planet's orbit can be inverted to infer obliquity. However, few studies of more gener...

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Veröffentlicht in:Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 2016-03, Vol.457 (1), p.926-938
Hauptverfasser: Schwartz, J. C., Sekowski, C., Haggard, H. M., Pallé, E., Cowan, N. B.
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container_title Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
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creator Schwartz, J. C.
Sekowski, C.
Haggard, H. M.
Pallé, E.
Cowan, N. B.
description The obliquity of a terrestrial planet is an important clue about its formation and critical to its climate. Previous studies using simulated photometry of Earth show that continuous observations over most of a planet's orbit can be inverted to infer obliquity. However, few studies of more general planets with arbitrary albedo markings have been made and, in particular, a simple theoretical understanding of why it is possible to extract obliquity from light curves is missing. Reflected light seen by a distant observer is the product of a planet's albedo map, its host star's illumination, and the visibility of different regions. It is useful to treat the product of illumination and visibility as the kernel of a convolution. Time-resolved photometry constrains both the albedo map and the kernel, the latter of which sweeps over the planet due to rotational and orbital motion. The kernel's movement distinguishes prograde from retrograde rotation for planets with non-zero obliquity on inclined orbits. We demonstrate that the kernel's longitudinal width and mean latitude are distinct functions of obliquity and axial orientation. Notably, we find that a planet's spin axis affects the kernel – and hence time-resolved photometry – even if this planet is east–west uniform or spinning rapidly, or if it is north–south uniform. We find that perfect knowledge of the kernel at 2–4 orbital phases is usually sufficient to uniquely determine a planet's spin axis. Surprisingly, we predict that east–west albedo contrast is more useful for constraining obliquity than north–south contrast.
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subjects Albedo
Astronomy
Extrasolar planets
Illumination
Kernels
Knowledge
Light (illumination)
Orbitals
Photometry
Planets
Star & galaxy formation
Visibility
title Inferring planetary obliquity using rotational and orbital photometry
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