The Dawes Review 3: The Atmospheres of Extrasolar Planets and Brown Dwarfs
Jeremy Bailey

TL;DR
This review discusses recent advances in understanding the atmospheres of exoplanets and brown dwarfs, highlighting observational findings, modeling challenges, and open questions in atmospheric composition, cloud behavior, and thermal structures.
Contribution
It synthesizes recent observational and theoretical developments in exoplanet and brown dwarf atmospheres, emphasizing new techniques and unresolved issues.
Findings
Brown dwarf atmospheres are relatively well understood.
Observations show diverse cloud and haze properties in exoplanets.
Inflated radii in some hot Jupiters remain unexplained.
Abstract
The last few years has seen a dramatic increase in the number of exoplanets known and in the range of methods for characterising their atmospheric properties. At the same time, new discoveries of increasingly cooler brown dwarfs have pushed down their temperature range which now extends down to Y-dwarfs of <300 K. Modelling of these atmospheres has required the development of new techniques to deal with the molecular chemistry and clouds in these objects. The atmospheres of brown dwarfs are relatively well understood, but some problems remain, in particular the behavior of clouds at the L/T transition. Observational data for exoplanet atmosphere characterization is largely limited to giant exoplanets that are hot because they are near to their star (hot Jupiters) or because they are young and still cooling. For these planets there is good evidence for the presence of CO and H2O…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
