Smaller than Expected Bright-spot Offsets in Spitzer Phase Curves of the Hot Jupiter Qatar-1b

Open Access
Authors
  • D. Keating
  • K.B. Stevenson
  • N.B. Cowan
  • E. Rauscher
  • J.L. Bean
  • T. Bell
  • L. Dang
  • D. Deming
  • J.-M. Désert ORCID logo
  • Y.K. Feng
  • J.J. Fortney
  • T. Kataria
  • E.M.-R. Kempton
  • N. Lewis
  • M.R. Line
  • M. Mansfield
  • E. May
  • C. Morley
  • A.P. Showman
Publication date 01-05-2020
Journal Astronomical Journal
Article number 225
Volume | Issue number 159 | 5
Number of pages 11
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
We present Spitzer full-orbit thermal phase curves of the hot Jupiter Qatar-1b, a planet with the same equilibrium temperature—and intermediate surface gravity and orbital period—as the well-studied planets HD 209458b and WASP-43b. We measure secondary eclipse depths of 0.21 ± 0.02% at 3.6 μm and 0.30 ± 0.02% at 4.5 μm, corresponding to dayside brightness temperatures of 1542+31-32 K and 1557+36-35 K, respectively, consistent with a vertically isothermal dayside. The respective nightside brightness temperatures are 1117+71-76 and - + 1167 74 69 K, in line with a trend that hot Jupiters all have similar nightside temperatures. We infer a Bond albedo of 0.12+0.16-0.14 and a moderate day–night heat recirculation efficiency, similar to HD 209458b. General circulation models for HD 209458b and WASP-43b predict that their bright spots should be shifted east of the substellar point by tens of degrees, and these predictions were previously confirmed with Spitzer full-orbit phase curve observations. The phase curves of Qatar-1b are likewise expected to exhibit eastward offsets. Instead, the observed phase curves are consistent with no offset: 11° ± 7° at 3.6 μm and −4° ± 7° at 4.5 μm. The discrepancy in circulation patterns between these three otherwise similar planets points to the importance of secondary parameters like rotation rate and surface gravity, and the presence or absence of clouds, in determining atmospheric conditions on hot Jupiters
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ab83f4
Published at https://arxiv.org/abs/2004.00014
Other links https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2020AJ....159..225K/abstract
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