observational constraints on the formation and properties of giant planets jeff valenti

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on the on the Formation Formation and and Properties Properties of Giant of Giant Planets Planets Jeff Valenti

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Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti. Road Map for the Talk. Orbital Properties of Planets Observed Planet-Metallicity Relationship Two competing planet formation theories We measured lots of stellar abundances - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

ObservationaObservational l Constraints Constraints on the on the Formation Formation and and Properties Properties of Giant of Giant PlanetsPlanets

Jeff Valenti

Page 2: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Orbital Properties of Planets

Observed Planet-Metallicity Relationship Two competing planet formation theories We measured lots of stellar abundances Higher metallicity stars have more detected planets!

Not caused by accretion of rocky debris

Timescale for Building Gas Giant Planets Our HST detection of hot H2

Characterizing Transiting Planets My HST program to observe an evaporating exosphere JWST spectra of atmospheric absorption and emission

Road Map for the Talk

Page 3: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Planet DiscoveryPLANET consortium

SWEEPS, XO

N2K, Ge

Page 4: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Planets Migrate!http://exoplanets.org/a_hist.gif

“Snow Line”

Pile-up at P=3 days

Page 5: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Disk is Truncated by Stellar Magnetosphere

Shu et al. (1994)

Milky Way & CookiesMonday, April 3

Page 6: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Two Theories of Planet Formation

Metals : 0.1 nm

Dust : 1 nm – 1 mm

Planetesimals : 1 mm – 1 km

Cores : 1 km – 1 Mm

Planets : 1 Mm – 0.1 Gm

Core-AccretionCore-Accretion

GravitationalGravitationalInstabilityInstability

crit nH

Do Metals Matter ?

Do Metals Matter ?

Page 7: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

SME - “Spectroscopy Made Easy” Valenti & Piskunov (1996, A&AS, 118, 595) Publicly available

Radiative transfer code [with Nikolai Piskunov] LTE, Feautrier solver, Adaptive λ grid, C++ Chemical equilibrium for over 150 molecules (NextGen EOS)

Fit observed spectrum with synthetic spectrum Use precise atomic data from solar spectrum fit Interpolate Kurucz atmospheres in Teff, logg, and [M/H] Calculate synthetic intensities across the stellar surface

Integrate over stellar surface: rotation and RT macroturbulence

Non-linear least squares solver (Levenberg-Marquardt) Free parameters: log(gf), Teff, logg, [M/H], etc.

Spectroscopic Analysis Tool

Page 8: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Determining Spectroscopic Properties

Segment #1

Segment #2

Valenti & Fischer (2005)

Page 9: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Stellar Macroturbulence

Valenti & Fischer (2005)

Page 10: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Isochrone Analysis

1040 Stars

T, L, Fe,

M, R, age

Page 11: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Spectroscopic Properties of Cool Stars

Valenti & Fischer (2005, ApJS, 159, 141) 1807 observed spectra (6 CPU months) 1040 nearby dwarfs and subgiants N2K: 410 Keck + 400 Subaru + 270 Magellan spectra analyzed

Properties based on fitting spectra Effective temperature (1%) Surface gravity (15%) Rotational velocity (0.5 km/s) Abundances: Na, Si, Ti, Fe, Ni (5-10%)

Properties based on matching evolutionary models Stellar mass (15%) Radius (3%) Age constraints

Page 12: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Metals in Full Sample and Stars with Planets

Page 13: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Quadratic Dependence on Stellar Metals

p = (10 [Fe/H])

= ( N(Fe) M)

= (4.5 ± 0.8) % = (1.8 ± 0.3)

N(Fe) M

Increasing metals by 40% doubles the number of stars with planets

Fischer & Valenti (2005)

Page 14: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Dependence on Stellar Mass? Fischer & Valenti (2005)

Cooler Stars

Metallicity bias…

Page 15: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Does Accretion Cause Planet-Metallicity Relationship?

6500 6000 5500 5000TEFF (K)

0.0

-0.2

-0.4

-0.6

0.2

0.4

0.6

[M/H]

Stars withPlanets

Pinsonneault, De Poy, & Coffee (2001)

1 M

Page 16: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Subgiants with and without Planets

6500 6000 5500 5000TEFF (K)

4.0

6.0

8.0

2.0

0.0

M bol

Planets

Subgiants

Page 17: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Subgiant Test – No Diluted Enrichment

6500 6000 5500 5000TEFF (K)

4500

-0.2

-0.6

0.2

0.6

[Fe/H]

Subgiants with planets are still metal rich

[Fe/H]=0.15

Page 18: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Velocity Precision vs. Metallicity

Page 19: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Line Depths NOT Proportional to Abundance

Strong Lines are Saturated

Page 20: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Metals Do Not Affect Migration Stopping Point

Page 21: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Stars with Distant Planets Seem To Be Metal Rich

3% of Keck sample has long period

planets

Statistics are improving where giant planets form.

Page 22: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Next Step: Detection Limits for Each Star

Adapted from Cumming(2004, MNRAS, 354, 1165)P < 4 yr

K > 30

m/s

30 m/s

N=15

N=30

p=99%p=50%

FV05

Page 23: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Classical Core-Accretion Model Is Slow

Phase ICore formation

via rapid accretionof planetesimalsin “feeding zone”

Phase IIEnvelope formation viagradual gas accretion

Phase IIIGiant planet formationvia rapid gas accretion

Pollack et al. (1996)

IsolationMass

Core Only

Core +Envelope

Page 24: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Dust Near a Star Dissipates Quickly

Haisch, Lada, & Lada (2001)

Warm dust only lasts “a

few Myr”

How long does the gas last?

Page 25: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Hot Inner Edge(s) of Disks

Akeson et al. (2006)

RY TauSU Aur

Page 26: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Molecular Hydrogen in Accretion Disks

Herczeg et al.(2002; 2004; 2005)

Page 27: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Ly- Pumped Fluorescence of Hot H2Herczeg et al. (2004)

Page 28: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Ly- Pumped Fluorescence of Hot H2Herczeg et al. (2004)

Page 29: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Find planets that transit bright (V<12) stars Absorption by planetary atmosphere during transit Thermal emission in and out of secondary eclipse 1) HD209458b, 2) TrES-1, 3) HD189733b, 4) HD149026b

N2K Survey Fischer (SFSU), Laughlin (UCSC), Valenti (STScI), … Surveying the “next 2000” stars, V<10.5 (14,000 candidates)

Constructed metal-rich sample using photometric indexes

“Three strikes and you’re out!” - focus on short periods

So far: 410 Keck + 400 Subaru + 270 Magellan stars So far: 7 planets announced + 3 in press + 36 candidates

So far: 1 new transiting planet!

Comparative Planetology

Page 30: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

“N2K” Discovers Its First Transiting Planet!

Subaru & Keck– 0.5 0.0 0.5

Orbital Phase

– 40

0

40

Velocity (m/s)

HD 149026

Sato et al. (2006)

Page 31: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Diversity of Planets - Formation vs. Evolution

Bouchy et al. (2005)Evaporating

Exosphere Program 10718

Page 32: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Evaporating Exospheres

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Vidal Madjar et al. (2003)

Page 33: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Planetary Transits with JWST/NIRSpec

QuickTime™ and aYUV420 codec decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Brown (1991)

R=3000

Page 34: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Planetary Eclipses with JWST/NIRSpec

Spitzer

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

R=3000

Page 35: Observational Constraints on the Formation and Properties of Giant Planets Jeff Valenti

Key Results Spectroscopic Properties of Cool Stars (SPOCS)

1040 solar-type stars in Keck, Lick, AAT planet search programs

Analyzing another 2000 stars in N2K program

Quantified Planet-Metallicity Relationship Increasing metals by 40% doubles the number of stars with planets

Not due to preferential accretion of metals onto star Inconsistent with gravitational instability (migration?) Fundamental constraint on all formation models

HST and JWST will characterize disks and atmospheres Use fluoresced H2 to study gas in protoplanetary disks Measure extent of planetary exosphere during transit Obtain atmospheric absorption spectra during transit Measure thermal emission spectra in/out of secondary eclipse