Abstract

The detection of extrasolar planets' atmospheres requires very demanding observations. For planets that can not be spatially separated from their host stars, i.e. the vast majority of planets, the transiting planets are the only ones allowing to probe their atmospheres. This is possible from transmission spectroscopy or from measurements taken during secondary eclipse. An alternative is the measurement of the Rossiter-McLaughlin-effect, which is sensitive to the size of the planetary radius. Since the radius is wavelength-dependent due to contributions of strong planetary absorption lines, this opens a path to probe planetary atmospheres also with ground-based high-resolution spectroscopy. The major goal of our numerical simulations is to provide a reliable estimate of the amplitude of the wavelength-dependent RM-effect. Our numerical simulations provide phase resolved synthetic spectra modeling the partly eclipsed stellar surface during the transit in detail. Using these spectra we can obtain RM-curves for different wavelength regions and for a wavelength-dependent planetary radius. Curves from regions with high and low contributions of absorption lines within the planetary atmosphere can be compared. From these differential effects observable quantities are derived. We applied our simulations to HD209458. Our numerical simulations show that a detailed treatment of the limb darkening for the synthetic spectra is important for a precise analysis. Compared to a parameterized limb darkening law, systematic errors of 6 m/sec occur. The wavelength dependency of the planetary atmospheres over the NaD-doublet produce a differential effect in the RM-curve of 1.5 m/sec for a star with a rotation velocity of 4.5 km/sec which increases to 4 m/sec for twice the rotation velocity.

Highlights

  • Within the two recent decades, the search for extrasolar planets has been mainly driven by the success of the radial velocity (RV) method

  • The wavelength dependency of the planetary atmospheres over the NaD-doublet produces a differential effect in the Rossiter-McLaughlin curve of 1.5 m s−1 for a star with a rotation velocity of 4.5 km s−1, which increases to 4 m s−1 for twice the rotation velocity

  • As a tool for probing planetary atmospheres the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect requires phase-resolved, high signal-tonoise, high-resolution spectra taken with a stabilized spectrograph in order to obtain reliable results for slowly rotating (

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Summary

Introduction

Within the two recent decades, the search for extrasolar planets has been mainly driven by the success of the radial velocity (RV) method. A large fraction of our knowledge about the physical properties relies, on analyses of transiting planets, because more information can be obtained from various techniques for transiting planets: the radius and the orbital inclination from the light curve analysis together with the mass function from RV-measurements provide the mean planetary density. The method detecting planetary atmospheres with the RME is based on the radius of an extrasolar planet depending on wavelength. This is caused, on the one hand, by the atmosphere of the planet showing variations in optical depth with respect to the wavelength (Barman 2007; Fortney et al 2008).

Modeling the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect
The star
Synthetic spectrum of the host star
The planet
Wavelength-dependent planetary radius
Results
The effect of limb-darkening
The wavelength-dependent Rossiter-McLaughlin effect
Wavelength-dependent transit light curves
The influence of the stellar rotation velocity
Conclusion
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