On the Emergent Spectra of Hot Protoplanet Collision Afterglows
Eliza Miller-Ricci, Michael R. Meyer, Sara Seager, Linda Elkins-Tanton

TL;DR
This study investigates the observable spectra of hot, molten protoplanets during their formation, highlighting how atmospheric properties influence their detectability with current and future telescopes.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of how atmospheric mass and composition affect the emergent spectra and detectability of hot protoplanets in formation.
Findings
Thinner atmospheres allow easier detection of hot surfaces.
More massive planets are easier to detect due to larger emitting areas.
Next-generation telescopes are needed to observe terrestrial planets within a few AU.
Abstract
We explore the appearance of terrestrial planets in formation by studying the emergent spectra of hot molten protoplanets during their collisional formation. While such collisions are rare, the surfaces of these bodies may remain hot at temperatures of 1000-3000 K for up to millions of years during the epoch of their formation. These object are luminous enough in the thermal infrared to be observable with current and next generation optical/IR telescopes, provided that the atmosphere of the forming planet permits astronomers to observe brightness temperatures approaching that of the molten surface. Detectability of a collisional afterglow depends on properties of the planet's atmosphere -- primarily on the mass of the atmosphere. A planet with a thin atmosphere is more readily detected, because there is little atmosphere to obscure the hot surface. Paradoxically, a more massive…
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