Atmospheric Circulation of Eccentric Hot Jupiter HAT-P-2b
Nikole K. Lewis, Adam P. Showman, Jonathan J. Fortney, Heather A., Knutson, and Mark S. Marley

TL;DR
This study models the atmospheric circulation of the eccentric hot Jupiter HAT-P-2b, exploring effects of composition and rotation, and highlights the need for improved chemical understanding to match observations.
Contribution
The paper presents three-dimensional atmospheric models of HAT-P-2b considering different compositions and rotation rates, revealing limitations in current models to reproduce observed phase curves.
Findings
TiO/VO presence causes temperature inversions and flux variations.
Metallicity and rotation rate have minimal impact on flux predictions.
Current models cannot fully explain observed phase curves.
Abstract
The hot-Jupiter HAT-P-2b has become a prime target for Spitzer Space Telescope observations aimed at understanding the atmospheric response of exoplanets on highly eccentric orbits. Here we present a suite of three-dimensional atmospheric circulation models for HAT-P-2b that investigate the effects of assumed atmospheric composition and rotation rate on global scale winds and thermal patterns. We compare and contrast atmospheric models for HAT-P-2b, which assume one and five times solar metallicity, both with and without TiO/VO as atmospheric constituents. Additionally we compare models that assume a rotation period of half, one, and two times the nominal pseudo-synchronous rotation period. We find that changes in assumed atmospheric metallicity and rotation rate do not significantly affect model predictions of the planetary flux as a function of orbital phase. However, models in which…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
