Bright optical dayside emission from extrasolar planet CoRoT-2b
I.A.G. Snellen, E.J.W. de Mooij, A. Burrows

TL;DR
This study analyzes CoRoT-2b's optical emission, detecting a deep secondary eclipse, and models its atmosphere to understand its thermal properties and the presence of a thermal inversion layer.
Contribution
It presents the first detection of optical dayside emission from CoRoT-2b and models its atmosphere, suggesting the absence of a high-altitude thermal inversion.
Findings
Deep secondary eclipse detected at 1.02+-0.20 x10^-4
Brightness temperature of 2170+-55 K exceeds maximum effective temperature
Models indicate a possible lack of thermal inversion in CoRoT-2b's atmosphere
Abstract
We present our analysis of the red-channel CoRoT data of CoRoT-2b. A deep secondary eclipse is detected at a level of 1.02+-0.20 x10-4, which suggests that all of the planet-signal detected previously in white light by Alonso et al. (2009) originates from the red channel. CoRoT-2b is the coolest exoplanet that has been detected in the optical so far. In contrast to the other planets, its measured brightness temperature of 2170+-55 K is significantly higher than its maximum hemisphere-averaged effective day-side temperature. However, it is not expected that a hot Jupiter radiates as a black body, and its thermal spectrum can deviate significantly from a Planck curve. We present models of the planet/star flux ratio as function of wavelength, which are calculated for a T/P profile in radiative and hydrostatic equilibrium, using a self-consistent atmosphere code. These are compared with the…
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