Effect of Longitudinally Varying Cloud Coverage on Visible Wavelength Reflected-Light Exoplanet Phase Curves
Matthew W. Webber, Nikole K. Lewis, Mark Marley, Caroline Morley,, Jonathan Fortney, Kerri Cahoy

TL;DR
This study models how varying cloud coverage on exoplanets affects their visible wavelength phase curves, revealing significant shifts and albedo variations that depend on cloud properties and planetary conditions.
Contribution
The paper introduces a detailed cloud coverage model that explains observed phase curve shifts and albedo variations, specifically applied to Kepler-7b, incorporating different cloud compositions and particle sizes.
Findings
Cloud coverage causes 2-10 deg phase curve shifts for Jupiter-like planets.
Up to 30 deg phase shift observed for hot Jupiters depending on cloud distribution.
Small particles and high-altitude clouds increase planetary albedo significantly.
Abstract
We use a planetary albedo model to investigate variations in visible wavelength phase curves of exoplanets. The presence of clouds on these exoplanets significantly alters their planetary albedo spectra. We confirm that non-uniform cloud coverage on the dayside of tidally locked exoplanets will manifest as changes to the magnitude and shift of the phase curve. In this work, we first investigate a test case of our model using a Jupiter-like planet, at temperatures consistent to 2.0 AU insolation from a solar type star, to consider the effect of H2O clouds. We then extend our application of the model to the exoplanet Kepler-7b and consider the effect of varying cloud species, sedimentation efficiency, particle size, and cloud altitude. We show that, depending on the observational filter, the largest possible shift of the phase curve maximum will be 2-10 deg for a Jupiter-like planet, and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
