Thermal phase curves of nontransiting terrestrial exoplanets 1. Characterizing atmospheres
Franck Selsis, Robin Wordsworth, Fran\c{c}ois Forget

TL;DR
This study explores how thermal phase curves can be used to detect and characterize atmospheres of nontransiting terrestrial exoplanets, potentially expanding atmospheric studies beyond transiting planets.
Contribution
It demonstrates the feasibility of using thermal phase curves and multi-band infrared observations to identify and analyze atmospheres of nontransiting terrestrial exoplanets with upcoming telescopes.
Findings
Atmospheric absorption bands create detectable signatures in phase curves.
Planets without atmospheres show large, distinguishable variations.
Photon-noise limited observations could enable atmospheric characterization of nearby nontransiting planets.
Abstract
Although transit spectroscopy is a powerful method for studying the composition, thermal properties and dynamics of exoplanet atmospheres, only a few transiting terrestrial exoplanets will be close enough to allow significant transit spectroscopy. Thermal phase curves (variations of the apparent infrared emission of the planet with its orbital phase) have been observed for hot Jupiters in both transiting and nontransiting configurations, and could be observed for hot terrestrial exoplanets. We study the wavelength and phase changes of the thermal emission of a tidally-locked terrestrial planet as atmospheric pressure increases, and address the observability of these multiband phase-curves and the ability to use them to detect atmospheric constituents. We used a 3D climate model (GCM) to simulate the CO2 atmosphere of a terrestrial planet on an 8-day orbit around a M3 dwarf and its…
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