ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
One of the most significant advances by NASAs ${mathit Kepler}$ Mission was the discovery of an abundant new population of highly irradiated planets with sizes between the Earth and Neptune. Subsequent analysis showed that at ~1.5 Earth radii there is a transition from a population of predominantly rocky super-Earths to non-rocky sub-Neptunes, which must have substantial volatile envelopes. Determining the origin of these highly irradiated rocky planets will be critical to our understanding of low-mass planet formation and the frequency of potentially habitable Earth-like planets. These short-period rocky super-Earths could simply be the stripped cores of sub-Neptunes, which have lost their envelopes due to atmospheric photo-evaporation or other processes, or they might instead be a separate population of inherently rocky planets, which never had significant envelopes. Using models of atmospheric photo-evaporation, we show that if most bare rocky planets are the evaporated cores of sub-Neptunes then the transition radius should decrease as surveys push to longer orbital periods, since on wider orbits only planets with smaller less massive cores can be stripped. On the other hand, if most rocky planets formed after their disks dissipate then these planets will have formed without initial gaseous envelopes. In this case, we use N-body simulations of planet formation to show that the transition radius should increase with orbital period, due to the increasing solid mass available in their disks. Moreover, we show that distinguishing between these two scenarios should be possible in coming years with radial velocity follow-up of planets found by TESS. Finally, we discuss the broader implications of this work for current efforts to measure $eta_{mathrm{oplus}}$, which may yield significant overestimates if most rocky planets form as evaporated cores.
We investigate equilibrium chemistry between a metal-core, a silicate-mantle, and a hydrogen-rich atmosphere (reactive core model) using 18 independent reactions among 25 phase components for sub-Neptune-like exoplanets. We find hydrogen and oxygen t
UV radiation can induce photochemical processes in exoplanet atmospheres and produce haze particles. Recent observations suggest that haze and/or cloud layers could be present in the upper atmospheres of exoplanets. Haze particles play an important r
The majority of exoplanets found to date have been discovered via the transit method, and transmission spectroscopy represents the primary method of studying these distant worlds. Currently, in-depth atmospheric characterization of transiting exoplan
The observed radii distribution of {it Kepler} exoplanets reveals two distinct populations: those that are more likely to be terrestrials ($lesssim1.7R_oplus$) and those that are more likely to be gas-enveloped ($gtrsim2R_oplus$). There exists a clea
The observational detection of a localized reduction in the small planet occurrence rate, sometimes termed a gap, is an exciting discovery because of the implications for planet evolutionary history. This gap appears to define a transition region in