Detecting Exomoons Around Self-luminous Giant Exoplanets Through Polarization
Sujan Sengupta, Mark S. Marley

TL;DR
This paper proposes that large exomoons around self-luminous giant exoplanets can be detected through time-resolved infrared polarization measurements during transits, with predicted polarization peaks of 0.1 to 0.3%.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method for exomoon detection using polarization signals during planetary transits, supported by detailed atmospheric models.
Findings
Polarization peaks between 0.1% and 0.3% during transits.
Time-resolved polarimetry can detect exomoons around self-luminous exoplanets.
Transit-induced polarization asymmetry is a promising detection technique.
Abstract
Many of the directly imaged self-luminous gas giant exoplanets have been found to have cloudy atmospheres. Scattering of the emergent thermal radiation from these planets by the dust grains in their atmospheres should locally give rise to significant linear polarization of the emitted radiation. However, the observable disk averaged polarization should be zero if the planet is spherically symmetric. Rotation-induced oblateness may yield a net non-zero disk averaged polarization if the planets have sufficiently high spin rotation velocity. On the other hand, when a large natural satellite or exomoon transits a planet with cloudy atmosphere along the line of sight, the asymmetry induced during the transit should give rise to a net non-zero, time resolved linear polarization signal. The peak amplitude of such time dependent polarization may be detectable even for slowly rotating…
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