Impact of hot exozodiacal dust on the polarimetric analysis of close-in exoplanets
Kevin Ollmann, Sebastian Wolf, Moritz Lietzow, Thomas A. Stuber

TL;DR
This paper investigates how hot exozodiacal dust affects the polarimetric detection and analysis of close-in exoplanets, highlighting the dust's potential to influence polarization signals in observational data.
Contribution
The study introduces a combined modeling approach using Monte Carlo radiative transfer and analytical dust models to assess the dust's impact on exoplanet polarization measurements.
Findings
Dust grain size significantly affects polarization signals.
In some cases, dust polarization exceeds that of exoplanets.
Polarization characteristics depend on orbital and dust parameters.
Abstract
Hot exozodiacal dust (HEZD) found around main-sequence stars through interferometric observations in the photometric bands H to L is located close to the dust sublimation radius, potentially at orbital radii comparable to those of close-in exoplanets. Consequently, HEZD has a potential influence on the analysis of the scattered-light polarization of close-in exoplanets and vice versa. We analyze the impact of HEZD on the polarimetric characterization of close-in exoplanets. This study is motivated in particular by the recently proven feasibility of exoplanet polarimetry. Applying the 3D Monte Carlo radiative transfer code POLARIS in an extended and optimized version for radiative transfer in exoplanetary atmospheres and an analytical tool for modeling the HEZD, we simulated and compared the polarization characteristics of the wavelength-dependent scattered-light polarization of HEZD and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
