Evolutionary Analysis of Gaseous Sub-Neptune-Mass Planets with MESA [EPA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1603.06596


Sub-Neptune-sized exoplanets represent one of the most common types of planets in the Milky Way, yet many of their properties are unknown. Here, we present a prescription to adapt the capabilities of the stellar evolution toolkit Modules for Experiments in Stellar Astrophysics (MESA) to model sub-Neptune mass planets with H/He envelopes. With the addition of routines treating the planet core luminosity, heavy element enrichment, atmospheric boundary condition, and mass loss due to hydrodynamic winds, the evolutionary pathways of planets with diverse starting conditions are more accurately constrained. Using these dynamical models, we construct mass-composition relationships of planets from 1 to 400 $M_{\oplus}$ and investigate how mass-loss impacts their composition and evolution history. We demonstrate that planet radii are typically insensitive to the evolution pathway that brought the planet to its instantaneous mass, composition and age, with variations from hysteresis. We find that planet envelope mass loss timescales, $\tau_{\rm env}$, vary non-monotonically with H/He envelope mass fractions (at fixed planet mass). In our simulations of young (100~Myr) low-mass ($M_p\lesssim10~M_\oplus$) planets with rocky cores, $\tau_{\rm env}$ is maximized at $M_{\rm env}/M_p=1\%$ to $3\%$. The resulting convergent mass loss evolution could potentially imprint itself on the close-in planet population as a preferred H/He mass fraction of ${\sim}1\%$. Looking ahead, we anticipate that this numerical code will see widespread applications complementing both 3-D models and observational exoplanet surveys.

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H. Chen and L. Rogers
Wed, 23 Mar 16
43/73

Comments: 18 pages, 9 figures, and 4 tables. Submitted to the Astrophysical Journal on August 30th 2015; awaiting re-submission. Draft includes referee’s comments. Public insights appreciated