The Statistics of Albedo and Heat Recirculation on Hot Exoplanets
Nicolas B. Cowan (Northwestern University), Eric Agol (University of, Washington)

TL;DR
This study statistically analyzes the albedo and heat redistribution efficiency of 24 hot exoplanets, revealing generally low albedos and diverse heat recirculation behaviors, with the hottest planets showing distinct characteristics.
Contribution
It introduces a model-independent method to estimate exoplanet temperatures and provides the first statistical analysis of albedo and heat redistribution for a sample of transiting exoplanets.
Findings
Low Bond albedos (A_B<0.35) are favored among the sample.
No correlation between T_d/T_0 and presence of stratospheric inversions.
Hottest planets (T>2400 K) tend to have low heat recirculation efficiency.
Abstract
[Abridged] If both the day-side and night-side effective temperatures of a planet can be measured, it is possible to estimate its Bond albedo, 0<A_B<1, as well as its day-night heat redistribution efficiency, 0<epsilon<1. We attempt a statistical analysis of the albedo and redistribution efficiency for 24 transiting exoplanets that have at least one published secondary eclipse. For each planet, we show how to calculate a sub-stellar equilibrium temperature, T_0, and associated uncertainty. We then use a simple model-independent technique to estimate a planet's effective temperature from planet/star flux ratios. We use thermal secondary eclipse measurements -those obtained at lambda>0.8 micron- to estimate day-side effective temperatures, T_d, and thermal phase variations -when available- to estimate night-side effective temperature. We strongly rule out the "null hypothesis" of a single…
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