MIT  News
 
 
Scientists generate first map of clouds on an exoplanet
Map reveals a lopsided cloud distribution on an extremely hot  planet.
Jennifer Chu, MIT News Office



 
(http://img.mit.edu/newsoffice/images/article_images/original/20131002174832-0.jpg)
 
Kepler 7b (left), which is 1.5 times the radius of Jupiter  (right), is the 
first exoplanet to have its clouds mapped. The cloud map was  produced 
using data from NASA's Kepler and Spitzer space telescopes.  



On the exoplanet Kepler 7b, the weather is highly predictable, an  
international team of scientists has found: On any given day, the exoplanet,  
which 
orbits a star nearly 1,000 light-years from Earth, is heavily overcast on  
one side, while the other side likely enjoys clear, cloudless weather.  

The new work, by researchers from MIT and other institutions, is the  first 
mapping of the distribution of clouds on an exoplanet. The scientists  
observed that one of Kepler 7b’s hemispheres is blanketed with a dense layer of 
 
clouds — far denser than any found on Earth, and so thick that it reflects 
a  significant portion of its host star’s incoming light. This shield of 
clouds  makes the planet cooler than others of its type, creating an atmosphere 
that  encourages further cloud formation. 

The team generated a low-resolution  map of the planet’s clouds using 
optical data from NASA’s Kepler Space  Telescope. The researchers also analyzed 
the light originating from Kepler 7b at  various phases of its orbit, finding 
that much of the planet’s reflectivity is  due to the presence of clouds, 
and that this cloud cover is unevenly  distributed. 

“There are a lot of different chemical processes that could  take place to 
create this inhomogeneous cloud,” says Nikole Lewis, a postdoc in  the 
Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences (EAPS). “Kepler 7b  is 
an 
important test-bed for the way circulation and cloud distribution work  
together in exoplanet atmospheres.”

Lewis and her colleagues have  published their results in Astrophysical 
Journal Letters. Co-authors from  MIT include postdocs Brice-Olivier Demory and 
Andras Zsom, graduate student  Julien de Wit, and Sara Seager, the Class of 
1941 Professor of Physics and  Planetary Science. 

Mapping clouds, slice by  slice

Kepler 7b was among the first exoplanets identified by the  Kepler 
spacecraft, which has since confirmed more than 130 planets outside our  solar 
system. The planet is considered a “hot Jupiter,” as it is composed mostly  of 
gas, and is about 50 percent larger than Jupiter (although it has only about  
half the mass of that planet). 

In 2011, Demory analyzed Kepler 7b’s  albedo, or reflectivity, and found 
that it is unusually bright for an exoplanet,  reflecting about 50 percent of 
light from its star. At the time, the cause of  such reflectivity was a 
mystery, but the new analysis, which makes use of  Spitzer’s infrared 
observations, reveals that much of it is due to the presence  of clouds in 
Kepler 7b’s 
atmosphere. 

To reach this conclusion, the  researchers looked through three years’ 
worth of Kepler light data, combined  with recent thermal observations from the 
planet, taken with NASA’s Spitzer  Space Telescope. Combining both datasets, 
the researchers compared the amount of  light and heat given off by the 
planet at every phase of its orbit. The planet  is tidally locked, presenting 
the same face to its star at all times. From  Earth, the planet appears to 
wax and wane as it circles its star, much like the  phases of our moon. 

“You can reconstruct the information in terms of  brightness, slice by 
slice,” de Wit says. “This is really fantastic, because  though the planet is 
extremely small, there are techniques for getting spatial  information about 
the planet.” 

Clouds rolling  in

The researchers analyzed Kepler 7b’s phase curves —  measurements of light 
from the planet at every orbital phase, taken by the  Kepler spacecraft. To 
determine whether these emissions stem from light or heat,  the team looked 
at phase curves in the infrared, provided by Spitzer. They  detected very 
little thermal energy emitted by the planet — a confirmation that  most of 
Kepler 7b’s emissions are indeed reflected light. 

But that  finding wasn’t a sure indication of clouds on the planet. The 
group reasoned  that the reflected light could instead be caused by a 
phenomenon called Rayleigh  scattering, in which light from Kepler 7b’s star 
uniformly scatters around the  planet, reflected by atoms or molecules much 
smaller 
than those in clouds — much  as Earth’s atmospheric gases scatter sunlight, 
creating a blue sky.    

To distinguish between the two possibilities, the group looked again at  
Kepler 7b’s phase curves. If the planet’s reflectivity is due to uniform  
Rayleigh scattering, its light emissions should peak at the point at which the  
planet is behind the star, displaying its full dayside to an observer. But  
instead, the researchers found that the planet’s brightness peaked slightly 
 after it had passed behind the star, indicating that its reflectivity is 
not  uniform — a sign that the reflectivity was due to an uneven distribution 
of  clouds.

It’s unclear exactly what conditions may give rise to such a  stark 
contrast in cloud cover; Lewis says that investigating the possible causes  
will be 
a research focus in the future.

“Kepler 7b happens to be in this  temperature range where you can form 
condensates high up in the atmosphere,”  Lewis observes. “Compared to Jupiter, 
it has a lower gravity that allows you to  keep particles lofted much more 
readily. So Kepler 7b is in this happy regime  that allows the atmosphere to 
create this dense cloud deck. It will keep us busy  for the next several 
years.” 

“This detection of clouds on Kepler 7b is  very startling, but also very 
convincing,” says Drake Deming, a professor of  astronomy at the University of 
Maryland who was not involved in the research.  “This illustrates that the 
Kepler data are a gold mine of information that we  haven’t fully mined yet, 
even for atmospheric properties.”

This research  was funded by NASA. Zsom was supported by the German Science 
Foundation, and de  Wit received support from the Belgian American 
Educational Foundation and  Wallonie-Bruxelles International. Lewis is 
supported by 
a Sagan fellowship.

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.

Reply via email to