Theoretical Spectra and Light Curves of Close-in Extrasolar Giant Planets and Comparison with Data
A. Burrows, J. Budaj, and I. Hubeny

TL;DR
This paper develops theoretical models of close-in extrasolar giant planets' atmospheres, spectra, and light curves, compares them with observational data, and identifies the presence of thermal inversions and stratospheres linked to stellar flux levels.
Contribution
It introduces models predicting atmospheric features like thermal inversions and stratospheres, correlates these with stellar flux, and estimates heat redistribution parameters for close-in EGPs.
Findings
Thermal inversions and stratospheres are common in some EGPs.
Water in atmospheres is consistent with observational data.
A stellar flux threshold influences the presence of stratospheres.
Abstract
We present theoretical atmosphere, spectral, and light-curve models for extrasolar giant planets (EGPs) undergoing strong irradiation for which {\it Spitzer} planet/star contrast ratios or light curves have been published (circa June 2007). These include HD 209458b, HD 189733b, TrES-1, HD 149026b, HD 179949b, and And b. By comparing models with data, we find that a number of EGP atmospheres experience thermal inversions and have stratospheres. This is particularly true for HD 209458b, HD 149026b, and And b. This finding translates into qualitative changes in the planet/star contrast ratios at secondary eclipse and in close-in EGP orbital light curves. Moreover, the presence of atmospheric water in abundance is fully consistent with all the {\it Spitzer} data for the measured planets. For planets with stratospheres, water absorption features invert into emission…
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