Exoplanet albedo spectra and colors as a function of planet phase, separation, and metallicity
Kerri L. Cahoy, Mark S. Marley, Jonathan J. Fortney

TL;DR
This paper models how exoplanet albedo spectra and colors vary with separation, metallicity, and phase, providing insights for future direct imaging observations of gas and ice giants.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive radiative-convective model for exoplanet spectra considering different metallicities, separations, and cloud structures, aiding interpretation of direct imaging data.
Findings
Cloud presence and structure significantly influence spectra.
Spectral features depend more on temperature and separation than metallicity.
Discrimination between different planet types is easier at certain separations.
Abstract
First generation optical coronagraphic telescopes will obtain images of cool gas and ice giant exoplanets around nearby stars. The albedo spectra of exoplanets at planet-star separations larger than about 1 AU are dominated by reflected light to beyond 1 {\mu}m and are punctuated by molecular absorption features. We consider how exoplanet albedo spectra and colors vary as a function of planet-star separation, metallicity, mass, and observed phase for Jupiter and Neptune analogs from 0.35 to 1 {\mu}m. We model Jupiter analogs with 1x and 3x the solar abundance of heavy elements, and Neptune analogs with 10x and 30x. Our model planets orbit a solar analog parent star at separations of 0.8 AU, 2 AU, 5 AU, and 10 AU. We use a radiative-convective model to compute temperature-pressure profiles. The giant exoplanets are cloud-free at 0.8 AU, have H2O clouds at 2 AU, and have both NH3 and H2O…
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