Habitability of planets on eccentric orbits: the limits of the mean flux approximation
Emeline Bolmont, Anne-Sophie Libert, J\'er\'emy Leconte, Franck Selsis

TL;DR
This study evaluates the limits of the mean flux approximation for planetary habitability on eccentric orbits, showing that high eccentricity and luminosity reduce the approximation's reliability due to significant insolation variations.
Contribution
The paper uses climate modeling to quantify when the mean flux approximation fails for eccentric exoplanets across different stellar luminosities.
Findings
Most eccentric planets can sustain surface water on the dayside.
High eccentricity and luminosity lead to complete freezing at apoastron.
The mean flux approximation becomes unreliable at high eccentricities and luminosities.
Abstract
Contrary to Earth, which has a small orbital eccentricity, some exoplanets discovered in the insolation habitable zone (HZ) have high orbital eccentricities (e.g., up to an eccentricity of for HD~20782~b). This raises the question of the capacity of these planets to host surface liquid water. In order to assess the habitability of an eccentric planet, the mean flux approximation is often used. It states that a planet on an eccentric orbit is called habitable if it receives on average a flux compatible with the presence of surface liquid water. However, as the planets do experience important insolation variations over one orbit and even spend some time outside the HZ for high eccentricities, the question of their habitability might not be as straightforward. We performed a set of simulations using the Global Climate Model LMDz, exploring the limits of the mean flux…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
