On the importance of geometry in exoplanet irradiation : Implications for the day-night contrast
Mradumay Sadh, Lorenzo Gavassino

TL;DR
This paper emphasizes the importance of geometric effects in exoplanet irradiation, especially in penumbral zones, providing a new model that improves temperature predictions and challenges previous assumptions about heat transport.
Contribution
It introduces a fundamental energy conservation-based model for irradiance variation in penumbral zones, correcting prior work and refining temperature estimates for close-in exoplanets.
Findings
Night-side illumination explains observed temperatures without complex heat transport.
New model accurately predicts irradiance in penumbral zones.
Revises previous irradiation models violating energy conservation.
Abstract
The irradiance received by a spherical body or a planet close to a spherically symmetric source does not follow the point-sized source approximation and the inverse-square variation of irradiation if spherical symmetry is broken. In the penumbral zones of the planet, spherical symmetry of the star reduces to an axial symmetry. Our work aims to put forward a fundamental explanation, using energy conservation, to determine the variation of irradiance in the penumbral zone on a close-in planet where the point-sized source approximation fails. Consequently, we propose a numerical model that accurately predicts the irradiance within the boundaries of the penumbral zone and the fully-illuminated zone. Our analysis also corrects a previous study on exoplanet irradiation that violates energy conservation. We find that night-side illumination partially explains the observed night-side…
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