Theoretical Radii of Extrasolar Giant Planets: the Cases of TrES-4, XO-3b, and HAT-P-1b
Xin Liu, Adam Burrows, and Laurent Ibgui

TL;DR
This paper develops theoretical models for the radii of specific extrasolar giant planets, incorporating factors like atmospheric opacity, core presence, and tidal heating, to explain their observed sizes and evolutionary states.
Contribution
It introduces detailed radius-age trajectories considering tidal heating and atmospheric effects, providing new insights into the physical processes shaping EGP radii.
Findings
Small core heating explains TrES-4's radius with moderate eccentricity.
Tidal heating is essential for XO-3b's radius due to its eccentric orbit.
Revised core mass estimates for HAT-P-1b align with metallicity correlations.
Abstract
To explain their observed radii, we present theoretical radius-age trajectories for the extrasolar giant planets (EGPs) TrES-4, XO-3b, and HAT-P-1b. We factor in variations in atmospheric opacity, the presence of an inner heavy-element core, and possible heating due to orbital tidal dissipation. A small, yet non-zero, degree of core heating is needed to explain the observed radius of TrES-4, unless its atmospheric opacity is significantly larger than a value equivalent to that at 10solar metallicity with equilibrium molecular abundances. This heating rate is reasonable, and corresponds for an energy dissipation parameter () of to an eccentricity of 0.01, assuming 3solar atmospheric opacity and a heavy-element core of . For XO-3b, which has an observed orbital eccentricity of 0.26, we show that tidal heating needs to be…
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