Inner Habitable Zone Boundary for Eccentric Exoplanets
Xuan Ji, Nora Bailey, Daniel Fabrycky, Edwin S. Kite, Jonathan H., Jiang, Dorian S. Abbot

TL;DR
This paper derives an analytical model for the inner habitable zone boundary of eccentric exoplanets, considering planetary heat capacity and eccentricity effects, to improve habitability assessments.
Contribution
It introduces a parameter-based analytical framework and a time-dependent energy balance model to accurately determine the IHZ boundary for eccentric planets.
Findings
The mean-stellar flux approximation is valid for $ 1.
The maximum-stellar flux approximation is valid for $ 0.01.
Earth-like oceans favor the mean-stellar flux limit across eccentricities.
Abstract
The climate of a planet can be strongly affected by its eccentricity due to variations in the stellar flux. There are two limits for the dependence of the inner habitable zone boundary (IHZ) on eccentricity: (1) the mean-stellar flux approximation (), in which the temperature is approximately constant throughout the orbit, and (2) the maximum-stellar flux approximation (), in which the temperature adjusts instantaneously to the stellar flux. Which limit is appropriate is determined by the dimensionless parameter , where is the heat capacity of the planet, is the orbital period, and , where is the outgoing longwave radiation and is the surface temperature. We use the Buckingham theorem to derive an analytical function for the IHZ in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
