Theoretical vs. observational uncertainties: composition of giant exoplanets
Simon M\"uller, Maya Ben-Yami, Ravit Helled

TL;DR
This study investigates how theoretical uncertainties in modeling giant exoplanets affect the inferred planetary properties, highlighting the importance of improved models to interpret observational data accurately.
Contribution
The paper systematically analyzes the impact of various model assumptions on the inferred properties of giant exoplanets, emphasizing the significance of theoretical uncertainties.
Findings
Updated equations of state lead to more compact planets.
Opacity enhancements significantly alter planetary radius and metallicity estimates.
Theoretical uncertainties can surpass observational errors.
Abstract
In order to characterize giant exoplanets and better understand their origin, knowledge of how the planet's composition depends on its mass and stellar environment is required. In this work, we simulate the thermal evolution of gaseous planets and explore how various common model assumptions such as different equations of state, opacities, and heavy-element distributions affect the inferred radius and metallicity. We examine how the theoretical uncertainties translate into uncertainties in the inferred planetary radius and bulk metallicity. While we confirm the mass-metallicity trend previously reported in the literature, this correlation disappears when removing a 20 heavy-element core from all the planets. We also show that using an updated hydrogen-helium equation of state leads to more compact planets. As a result, we present six planets that should be classified as…
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