Distorted, non-spherical transiting planets: impact on the transit depth and on the radius determination
J\'er\'emy Leconte, Dong Lai, Gilles Chabrier

TL;DR
This paper quantifies how tidal and rotational deformations of transiting planets cause biases in radius measurements, providing analytical tools to correct for these effects and improve planetary characterization.
Contribution
It introduces simple analytical expressions for the shape of tidally deformed planets and calibrates them with numerical models, enabling more accurate radius determination from transit data.
Findings
Deformation causes up to 20% effect on transit depth.
Measured radius can be underestimated by about 10%.
Corrections are essential for accurate planetary size estimates.
Abstract
We quantify the systematic impact of the non-spherical shape of transiting planets and brown dwarfs, due to tidal forces and rotation, on the observed transit depth. Such a departure from sphericity leads to a bias in the derivation of the transit radius from the light curve and affects the comparison with planet structure and evolution models which assume spherical symmetry. As the tidally deformed planet projects its smallest cross section area during the transit, the measured effective radius is smaller than the one of the unperturbed spherical planet. This effect can be corrected by calculating the theoretical shape of the observed planet. We derive simple analytical expressions for the ellipsoidal shape of a fluid object (star or planet) accounting for both tidal and rotational deformations and calibratre it with fully numerical evolution models in the 0.3Mjup-75Mjup mass range.…
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