Generic Models for Disk-Resolved and Disk-Integrated Phase Dependent Linear Polarization of Light Reflected from Exoplanets
Aritra Chakrabarty, Sujan Sengupta

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new computational approach for modeling the linear polarization of light reflected from exoplanets, accounting for atmospheric properties and scattering effects, aiding future observational efforts.
Contribution
It presents a novel azimuth-dependent radiative transfer model for polarized light, incorporating self-consistent atmospheric parameters and benchmarking against existing models.
Findings
Multiple scattering causes depolarization depending on atmospheric albedo.
The models accurately predict polarization levels for hot Jupiters like HD 189733 b.
Benchmarking confirms the model's reliability for future observational analysis.
Abstract
Similar to the case of solar system planets, reflected starlight from exoplanets is expected to be polarized due to atmospheric scattering and the net disk integrated polarization should be non-zero owing to the asymmetrical illumination of the planetary disk. The computation of the disk-integrated reflected flux and its state of polarization involves techniques for the calculation of the local reflection matrices as well as the numerical recipes for integration over the planetary disks. In this paper, we present a novel approach to calculate the azimuth-dependent reflected intensity vectors at each location on the planetary disk divided into grids. We achieve this by solving the vector radiative transfer equations that describe linear polarization. Our calculations incorporate self-consistent atmospheric models of exoplanets over a wide range of equilibrium temperature, surface…
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