15min:
SPECTROSCOPY FOR HOT SUPER-EARTH EXOPLANETS.

P. F. BERNATH AND M. DULICK, Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, Old Dominion University, 4541 Hampton Boulevard, Norfolk, VA, 23529-0126, USA.

Spectroscopic observations of exoplanets are now possible by transit methods and direct emission. Spectroscopic requirements for exoplanet atmospheres will be reviewed based on existing measurements and model predictions for hot Jupiters and super-Earths. Super-Earths are exoplanets with masses in the range of about 2 to 10 Earth masses (i.e., between the size of Earth and Neptune). Many of them have very short orbital periods like hot Jupiters and are also hot because of proximity to their parent star. For example, Kepler-10b has a mass of 4.54 times that of Earth, a density of 8.74 g cm-3 and a surface temperature of 1833 K. More than thirty super-Earths have been discovered and the most interesting objects are rocky planets such as Kepler-10b and CoRoT-7b. Schaefer et al. have calculated the chemical equilibrium composition of super-Earths with temperatures in the range 500-4000 K based on the vaporization of silicate rocks similar to those of the Earth's continental crust and bulk silicate Earth. In addition to H2O, CO2, CH4, CO and H2 found in hot Jupiters, additional species such as SO2, O2, HCl, HF, NaCl, KCl, KF, KOH and NaOH are expected to be present. Similar to our previous work on hot ammonia and hot methane\footnoteHargreaves, R. J., et al. 2012, Hot Methane Line Lists for Exoplanet and Brown Dwarf Atmospheres, Astrophys. J. \textbf757, 46., emission spectra of hot SO2 will be presented. Continuing work on NaCl and KCl emission spectra will also be covered.