Pulsations in the atmospheres of hot Jupiters possessing magnetic fields
- Authors: Bisikalo D.V.1, Arakcheev A.S.1, Kaigorodov P.V.1
-
Affiliations:
- Institute of Astronomy
- Issue: Vol 61, No 11 (2017)
- Pages: 925-931
- Section: Article
- URL: https://journals.rcsi.science/1063-7729/article/view/191173
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1134/S1063772917110026
- ID: 191173
Cite item
Abstract
The discovery of the possible existence of huge quasi-stationary envelopes around a number of hot Jupiters (i.e., with sizes appreciably exceeding their Roche lobes) and the need to correctly take into account their properties when interpreting observational data require a careful analysis of the main physical processes influencing their atmospheres. One important factor is the possibility that the planet has a magnetic field. It was shown earlier that the presence of even a modest dipolar magnetic field of a hot Jupiter (with a magnetic moment approximately 1/10 the magnetic moment of Jupiter) influences the properties of the planetary atmosphere, in particular, leading to expansion of the range of parameters for which a giant, quasi-closed envelope can form around the planet. It was also established that the presence of a planetary magnetic field reduced the mass-loss rate from the envelope, since matter flowing out from the inner Lagrange point moves perpendicular to the field lines. Three-dimensional magnetohydrodynamical (MHD) modeling on time scales appreciably exceeding the time for the formation of the envelope show that pulsations arise in the atmospheres of hot Jupiters possessing dipolar magnetic fields, with characteristic periods ~0.27Porb. This behavior is easy to understand physically, since even in the case of a spherical atmosphere, the continuous expansion of the ionized atmsphere of a hot Jupiter can lead to the accumulation of matter in regions bounded by closed field lines, and to the periodic rupture of the atmosphere beyond the magnetic field. In the case considered, when the system contains a giant envelope fed by a stream of matter from the inner Lagrange point, the presence of such pulsations gives rise to appreciable variations in the gas-dynamical structure of the flow. In particular, pulsations of the atmosphere lead to tearing off of part of the flow and sharp fluctuations in the size of the envelope, leading to variations in the envelope’s observational properties.
About the authors
D. V. Bisikalo
Institute of Astronomy
Author for correspondence.
Email: bisikalo@inasan.ru
Russian Federation, ul. Pyatnitskaya 48, Moscow, 119017
A. S. Arakcheev
Institute of Astronomy
Email: bisikalo@inasan.ru
Russian Federation, ul. Pyatnitskaya 48, Moscow, 119017
P. V. Kaigorodov
Institute of Astronomy
Email: bisikalo@inasan.ru
Russian Federation, ul. Pyatnitskaya 48, Moscow, 119017
Supplementary files
