New Perspectives on the Exoplanet Radius Gap from a Mathematica Tool and Visualized Water Equation of State

  • Li Zeng
  • , Stein B. Jacobsen
  • , Eugenia Hyung
  • , Amit Levi
  • , Chantanelle Nava
  • , James Kirk
  • , Caroline Piaulet
  • , Gaia Lacedelli
  • , Dimitar D. Sasselov
  • , Michail I. Petaev
  • , Sarah T. Stewart
  • , Munazza K. Alam
  • , Mercedes López-Morales
  • , Mario Damasso
  • , David W. Latham

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

29 Scopus citations

Abstract

Recent astronomical observations obtained with the Kepler and TESS missions and their related ground-based follow-ups revealed an abundance of exoplanets with a size intermediate between Earth and Neptune (1 R ⊕ ≤ R ≤ 4 R ⊕). A low occurrence rate of planets has been identified at around twice the size of Earth (2 R ⊕), known as the exoplanet radius gap or radius valley. We explore the geometry of this gap in the mass-radius diagram, with the help of a Mathematica plotting tool developed with the capability of manipulating exoplanet data in multidimensional parameter space, and with the help of visualized water equations of state in the temperature-density (T-ρ) graph and the entropy-pressure (s-P) graph. We show that the radius valley can be explained by a compositional difference between smaller, predominantly rocky planets (<2 R ⊕) and larger planets (>2 R ⊕) that exhibit greater compositional diversity including cosmic ices (water, ammonia, methane, etc.) and gaseous envelopes. In particular, among the larger planets (>2 R ⊕), when viewed from the perspective of planet equilibrium temperature (T eq), the hot ones (T eq ⪆ 900 K) are consistent with ice-dominated composition without significant gaseous envelopes, while the cold ones (T eq ≲ 900 K) have more diverse compositions, including various amounts of gaseous envelopes.

Original languageEnglish
Article number247
JournalAstrophysical Journal
Volume923
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 20 2021

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