Predicting low-frequency radio fluxes of known extrasolar planets
J.-M. Grie{\ss}meier (1), P. Zarka (1), and H. Spreeuw (2) ((1) LESIA,, Observatoire de Paris, Meudon, France, (2) Astronomical Institute ''Anton, Pannekoek'', Amsterdam, The Netherlands)

TL;DR
This study compares four models predicting low-frequency radio emissions from known exoplanets, highlighting the potential for detection and providing estimates of planetary magnetic moments to guide observational campaigns.
Contribution
It systematically evaluates different analytical models for exoplanet radio emission, offering realistic flux predictions and magnetic dipole estimates for all known exoplanets.
Findings
Largest fluxes from magnetic energy model
Few promising targets for radio detection
Unipolar interaction model predicts no observable emission
Abstract
Context. Close-in giant extrasolar planets (''Hot Jupiters'') are believed to be strong emitters in the decametric radio range. Aims. We present the expected characteristics of the low-frequency magnetospheric radio emission of all currently known extrasolar planets, including the maximum emission frequency and the expected radio flux. We also discuss the escape of exoplanetary radio emission from the vicinity of its source, which imposes additional constraints on detectability. Methods. We compare the different predictions obtained with all four existing analytical models for all currently known exoplanets. We also take care to use realistic values for all input parameters. Results. The four different models for planetary radio emission lead to very different results. The largest fluxes are found for the magnetic energy model, followed by the CME model and the kinetic energy…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Scientific Research and Discoveries · Astro and Planetary Science
