Published July 23, 2021 | Version v1
Poster Open

The Radius Valley as a by-product of Planet Formation: Observational Signatures of the Core-Powered Mass-Loss Mechanism

  • 1. Department of Earth, Planetary, and Space Sciences, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA
  • 2. Department of Earth, Planetary, and Space Sciences, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095, US; Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MA 02139, US

Contributors

Contact person:

  • 1. Planetary Science Institute

Description

Observations have revealed a lack of planets of sizes ~1.5-2.0 Earth radii, i.e. a radius ‘valley’ or ‘gap’ in the size distribution of small, short-period exoplanets. This observation has been typically attributed to atmospheric mass-loss due to photoevaporation. However, in recent work, Ginzburg et al. (2018) and Gupta and Schlichting (2019, 2020) have demonstrated that atmospheric mass-loss, powered by the cooling luminosity of a planet and its host star’s bolometric luminosity, can also explain the origin of this radius valley, even in the absence of photoevaporation or any other process. In my talk, I will describe the key physical processes that drive this core-powered mass-loss mechanism followed by a comparison of our results with observations and the testable predictions we can make for the distribution of planets as a function of planet and host star properties. Finally, I will discuss our latest work where we present lists of planets that could be undergoing considerable atmospheric mass-loss or that might harbor secondary atmospheres abundant with high-molecular weight species, low-density interiors or both, if their evolution is indeed primarily dictated by core-powered mass-loss.

Files

poster_TSC2_Akash_Gupta.pdf

Files (2.0 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:d5db57df3a3f4fb59450995b52e64c05
2.0 MB Preview Download

Additional details

References

  • Owen & Wu 2013, ApJ, 775, 105
  • Fulton et al. 2017, AJ, 154, 109
  • Fulton & Petigura, 2018, AJ, 156, 264
  • Ginzburg et al. 2018, MNRAS, 476, 759
  • Gupta & Schlichting, 2019, MNRAS, 487, 24
  • Gupta & Schlichting, 2020, MNRAS, 493, 792
  • Gupta & Schlichting, 2021, MNRAS, 504, 4634
  • Rogers, Gupta, Owen & Schlichting, 2021, arXiv:2105.03443
  • Teske et al. 2020., AJ, 160, 96