Spitzer puts planets in a petri dish

Researchers are beginning to dissect the hot Jupiter class of planets, revealing raging winds and other aspects of their turbulent nature.
By | Published: May 7, 2013 | Last updated on May 18, 2023

What a hot Jupiter in a laboratory might look like
If astronomers could somehow pull planets out of the sky and analyze them in the laboratory, it might look something like this artistically altered image illustrating new research from NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope. The infrared observatory allows astronomers to study closely the atmospheres of hot Jupiter planets — those outside our solar system that orbit near the blistering heat of their stars. // NASA/JPL-Caltech
Our galaxy is teeming with a wild variety of planets. In addition to our solar system’s eight near-and-dear planets, there are more than 800 so-called exoplanets known to circle stars beyond our Sun. One of the first “species” of exoplanets to be discovered was the hot Jupiters, also known as roasters. These are gas giants like Jupiters, but they orbit closely to their stars, blistering under the heat.

Thanks to NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope, researchers are beginning to dissect this exotic class of planets, revealing raging winds and other aspects of their turbulent nature. A twist to come out of the recent research is the planets’ wide range of climates. Some are covered with a haze while others are clear. Their temperature profiles, chemistries, and densities differ as well.

“The hot Jupiters are beasts to handle. They are not fitting neatly into our models and are more diverse than we thought,” said Nikole Lewis of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge. “We are just starting to put together the puzzle pieces of what’s happening with these planets, and we still don’t know what the final picture will be.”

The very first exoplanet discovered around a Sun-like star was, in fact, a hot Jupiter, called 51 Pegasi b. It was detected in 1995 by Swiss astronomers using the radial velocity technique, which measures the wobble of a star caused by the tug of a planet. Because hot Jupiters are heavy and whip quickly around their stars, they are the easiest to find using this strategy. Dozens of hot Jupiter discoveries soon followed. At first, researchers thought they might represent a more common configuration for other planetary systems in our galaxy beyond our own solar system. But new research, including that from NASA’s Kepler space telescope, has shown that they are relatively rare.

In 2005, scientists were thrilled when Spitzer became the first telescope to detect light emitted by an exoplanet. Spitzer monitored the infrared light coming from a star and its planet — a hot Jupiter — as the planet disappeared behind the star in an event known as a secondary eclipse. Once again, this technique works best for hot Jupiters because they are the biggest and hottest planets.

In addition to watching hot Jupiters slip behind their stars, researchers also use Spitzer to monitor the planets as they orbit all the way around a star. This allows them to create global climate maps, revealing how the planets’ atmospheres vary from their hot sun-facing sides to their cooler night sides due, in part, to fierce winds. Hot Jupiters are frequently tidally locked, with one side always facing the star, just as our Moon is locked to Earth.

Since that first observation, Spitzer has probed the atmospheres of dozens of hot Jupiters, and some even smaller planets, uncovering clues about their compositions and climates.

“When Spitzer launched in 2003, we had no idea it would prove to be a giant in the field of exoplanet science,” said Michael Werner from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. “Now, we’re moving farther into the field of comparative planetary science, where we can look at these objects as a class, and not just as individuals.”

In the new study, Lewis and colleagues made the longest Spitzer observation yet of a hot Jupiter. The infrared telescope stared at the HAT-P-2 system continuously for six days, watching it cross in front of its star, slip behind, and then reappear on the other side, making a full orbit. What makes the observation even more exciting to scientists is that the planet has a cometlike eccentric orbit, carrying it as close as 2.8 million miles (4.5 million kilometers) to the star and out to as far as 9.3 million miles (15 million km). For reference, Mercury is about 28.5 million miles (45.9 million km) from our Sun at perihelion.

“It’s as if nature has given us a perfect lab experiment with this system,” said Heather Knutson of the California Institute of Technology. “Because the planet’s distance to the Sun changes, we can watch how fast it takes to heat up and cool down. It’s as though we’re turning the heat knob up on our planet and watching what happens.” Knutson led the first team to create a global “weather” map of a hot Jupiter, called HD 189733b, in 2007.

The new HAT-P-2b study is also one of the first to use multiple wavelengths of infrared light, instead of just one, while watching a full orbit of a hot Jupiter. This enables the scientists to peer down into different layers of the planet.

The results reveal that HAT-P-2b takes about a day to heat up as it approaches the hottest part of its orbit, and four to five days to cool down as it swings away. It also exhibits a temperature inversion — a hotter upper layer of gas — when it is closest to its star. What’s more, the carbon chemistry of the planet seems to be behaving in unexpected ways, which the astronomers are still trying to understand.

“These planets are much hotter and more dynamic than our Jupiter, which is sluggish by comparison,” said Lewis. “Strong winds are churning material up from below, and the chemistry is always changing.”

Another challenge in understanding hot Jupiters lies in parsing through the data. Lewis said her team’s six-day Spitzer observation left them with 2 million data points to map out while carefully removing instrument noise.

“Theories are being shot down right and left,” said Nick Cowan of Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois. “Right now, it’s like the wild, wild west.”