Characterizing exoplanetary atmospheres through infrared polarimetry
R.J. de Kok, D.M. Stam, T. Karalidi

TL;DR
This paper models the polarized thermal radiation of exoplanets using advanced radiative transfer simulations, revealing how polarization signals depend on atmospheric properties and can inform about planetary features like clouds, shape, and rotation.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive radiative transfer code that accounts for all scattering orders and spatial inhomogeneities, enabling detailed predictions of exoplanet polarization signals.
Findings
Polarization peaks near planetary limbs.
Polarization depends on atmospheric inhomogeneities.
Polarization signals can reveal planetary rotation and cloud features.
Abstract
Planets can emit polarized thermal radiation, just like brown dwarfs. We present calculated thermal polarization signals from hot exoplanets, using an advanced radiative transfer code that fully includes all orders of scattering by gaseous molecules and cloud particles. The code spatially resolves the disk of the planet, allowing simulations for horizontally inhomogeneous planets. Our results show that the degree of linear polarization, P, of an exoplanet's thermal radiation is expected to be highest near the planet's limb and that this P depends on the temperature and its gradient, the scattering properties and the distribution of the cloud particles. Integrated over the disk of a spherically symmetric planet, P of the thermal radiation equals zero. However, for planets that appear spherically asymmetric, e.g. due to flattening, cloud bands or spots in their atmosphere, differences in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Calibration and Measurement Techniques · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
