4.7 Article

Detailed models of super-Earths: How well can we infer bulk properties?

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 665, Issue 2, Pages 1413-1420

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/519554

Keywords

earth; planetary systems; planets and satellites : general

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The field of extrasolar planets has rapidly expanded to include the detection of planets with masses smaller than that of Uranus. Many of these are expected to have little or no hydrogen and helium gas, and we might find Earth analogs among them. In this paper we describe our detailed interior models for a rich variety of such massive terrestrial and ocean planets in the 1-10 M circle plus range (super-Earths). The grid presented here allows the characterization of the bulk composition of super-Earths detected in transit and with a measured mass. We show that, on average, planet radius measurements to better than 5%, combined with mass measurements to better than 10%, would permit us to distinguish between an icy or rocky composition. This is due to the fact that there is a maximum radius a rocky terrestrial planet may achieve for a given mass. Any value of the radius above this maximum terrestrial radius implies that the planet contains a large (> 10%) amount of water (ocean planet).

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