Hot Nights on Extrasolar Planets: Mid-IR Phase Variations of Hot Jupiters
N. B. Cowan, E. Agol, D. Charbonneau

TL;DR
This study uses Spitzer Space Telescope data to analyze mid-infrared phase variations of three hot Jupiters, providing constraints on their atmospheric heat recirculation and albedo, with the first detection of phase variation in HD 179949.
Contribution
First detection of mid-IR phase variation in HD 179949 and new constraints on heat recirculation and albedo of hot Jupiters using multi-epoch Spitzer observations.
Findings
HD 179949 shows a phase variation in IR at 8 micron.
HD 209458b recirculates at least 32% of incident stellar energy.
Upper limits on phase variations for 51 Peg and HD 209458 were established.
Abstract
We present results from Spitzer Space Telescope observations of the mid-infrared phase variations of three short-period extrasolar planetary systems: HD 209458, HD 179949 and 51 Peg. We gathered IRAC images in multiple wavebands at eight phases of each planet's orbit. We find the uncertainty in relative photometry from one epoch to the next to be significantly larger than the photon counting error at 3.6 micron and 4.5 micron. We are able to place 2-sigma upper limits of only 2% on the phase variations at these wavelengths. At 8 micron the epoch-to-epoch systematic uncertainty is comparable to the photon counting noise and we detect a phase function for HD 179949 which is in phase with the planet's orbit and with a relative peak-to-trough amplitude of 0.00141(33). Assuming that HD 179949b has a radius R_J < R_p < 1.2R_J, it must recirculate less than 21% of incident stellar energy to…
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