2021
DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.2112.04663
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Atmospheres of Rocky Exoplanets

R. Wordsworth,
L. Kreidberg

Abstract: Rocky planets are common around other stars, but their atmospheric properties remain largely unconstrained. Thanks to a wealth of recent planet discoveries and upcoming advances in observing capability, we are poised to characterize the atmospheres of dozens of rocky exoplanets in this decade. Theoretical understanding of rocky exoplanet atmospheres has advanced considerably in the last few years, yielding testable predictions of their evolution, chemistry, dynamics and even possible biosignatures. Here we rev… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(7 citation statements)
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References 263 publications
(340 reference statements)
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“…The conditions under which terrestrial planets can retain sizable atmospheres under different irradiation levels, timescales, types of host star, and planet masses, radii, and surface gravity all remain areas of active research. While an exoplanet's atmosphere can be studied via transit and/or eclipse observations, transmission spectroscopy has so far failed to conclusively determine the properties (or absence of) any rocky planet's atmosphere (e.g., see Wordsworth & Kreidberg 2021). To date, emission measurements have offered the best prospects for studying the properties of terrestrial exoplanets.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The conditions under which terrestrial planets can retain sizable atmospheres under different irradiation levels, timescales, types of host star, and planet masses, radii, and surface gravity all remain areas of active research. While an exoplanet's atmosphere can be studied via transit and/or eclipse observations, transmission spectroscopy has so far failed to conclusively determine the properties (or absence of) any rocky planet's atmosphere (e.g., see Wordsworth & Kreidberg 2021). To date, emission measurements have offered the best prospects for studying the properties of terrestrial exoplanets.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The atmosphere-reducing efficacy of late-accreting debris is further dependent on the timing of the impact event. Mdwarf planetary systems undergo an extended luminous pre-main sequence phase, during which initially waterrich or hydrogen-dominated planets undergo prolonged magma ocean phases (Schaefer et al 2016;Barth et al 2021;Wordsworth & Kreidberg 2021;Lichtenberg et al 2021aLichtenberg et al , 2022. Prebiotically relevant impact events onto formed planets must thus happen after the runaway greenhouse transition has receded to shorter orbital distances.…”
Section: Planetesimal Composition and Impact Timingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Second, the arrival of the most massive impactors, which are the most effective in triggering extended reduced atmospheres by equilibrating with sufficient surface water, is limited to a few tens of Myr in M star systems. At this time the runaway greenhouse threshold is far outside the orbit of planets that reside in potentially habitable regions during the stellar main-sequence phase (Luger & Barnes 2015;Schaefer et al 2016); meaning they will be in a global magma ocean regime (Wordsworth & Kreidberg 2021;Lichtenberg et al 2022), because a fraction of an Earth's ocean mass is already sufficient to keep the planetary surface temperature above the melting temperature of rocks (Boukrouche et al 2021). If the planetary mantle is a magma ocean, impactor iron merges with the target body core (Kendall & Melosh 2016).…”
Section: Impact-generated Reduced Climate States On Exoplanetsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Exoplanet observations in the 2020s will have the potential to probe the atmospheres and climates of select exoplanets on short-period orbits. To understand the history of these planets' atmospheres will require independent constraints on the importance of short-lived radioisotope heating during planet formation throughout the galaxy (Wordsworth & Kreidberg 2021;Lichtenberg et al 2022).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%