Extrasolar enigmas: from disintegrating exoplanets to exoasteroids [EPA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2002.10370


Thousands of transiting exoplanets have been discovered to date, thanks in great part to the {\em Kepler} space mission. As in all populations, and certainly in the case of exoplanets, one finds unique objects with distinct characteristics. Here we will describe the properties and behaviour of a small group of disintegrating' exoplanets discovered over the last few years (KIC 12557548b, K2-22b, and others). They evaporate, lose mass unraveling their naked cores, produce spectacular dusty comet-like tails, and feature highly variable asymmetric transits. Apart from these exoplanets, there is observational evidence for even smallerexo-‘objects orbiting other stars: exoasteroids and exocomets. Most probably, such objects are also behind the mystery of Boyajian’s star. Ongoing and upcoming space missions such as {\em TESS} and PLATO will hopefully discover more objects of this kind, and a new era of the exploration of small extrasolar systems bodies will be upon us.

Read this paper on arXiv…

J. Budaj, P. Kabath and E. Palle
Tue, 25 Feb 20
17/76

Comments: Accepted for publication in the book “Reviews in Frontiers of Modern Astrophysics: From Space Debris to Cosmology” (eds Kabath, Jones and Skarka; publisher Springer Nature) funded by the European Union Erasmus+ Strategic Partnership grant “Per Aspera Ad Astra Simul” 2017-1-CZ01-KA203-035562