arXiv:1001.0012v2 [astro-ph.EP] 20 Dec 2010Draft version May 20, 2018 Preprint typeset using L ATEX style emulateapj v. 8/13/10 THE STATISTICS OF ALBEDO AND HEAT RECIRCULATION ON HOT EXOPL ANETS Nicolas B. Cowan1,2, Eric Agol2, Draft version May 20, 2018 ABSTRACT If both the day-side and night-side effective temperatures of a pla net can be measured, it is possible to estimate its Bond albedo, 0 < AB<1, as well as its day–night heat redistribution efficiency, 0< ε <1. We attempt a statistical analysis of the albedo and redistribution efficiency for 24 transiting exoplanets that have at least one published secondary e clipse. For each planet, we show how to calculate a sub-stellar equilibrium temperature, T0, and associated uncertainty. We then use a simple model-independent technique to estimate a planet’s effective temperature from planet/star flux ratios. We use thermal secondary eclipse measurements —tho se obtained at λ >0.8 micron— to estimate day-side effective temperatures, Td, and thermal phase variations —when available— to estimatenight-sideeffectivetemperature. Westronglyruleoutth e“nullhypothesis”ofasingle ABand εforall 24planets. If wealloweachplanet to havedifferent paramete rs,we find that lowBond albedos are favored ( AB<0.35 at 1σconfidence), which is an independent confirmation of the low albedos inferred from non-detection of reflected light. Our sample exhibits a wide variety of redistribution efficiencies. When normalized by T0, the day-side effective temperatures of the 24 planets describe a uni-modal distribution. The two biggest outliers are GJ 436b (abno rmally hot) and HD 80606b (abnormally cool), and these are the only eccentric planets in our sa mple. The dimensionless quantity Td/T0exhibits no trend with the presence or absence of stratospheric in versions. There is also no clear trend between Td/T0andT0. That said, the 6 planets with the greatest sub-stellar equilibrium temperatures ( T >2400 K) have low ε, as opposed to the 18 cooler planets, which show a variety of recirculation efficiencies. This hints that the very hottest trans iting giant planets are qualitatively different from the merely hot Jupiters. We propose an explanation o f this trend based on how a planet’s radiative and advective times scale with temperature: both timescales are expected to be shorter for hotter planets, but the temperature-dependance of the radiative timescale is stronger, leading to decreased heat recirculation efficiency. Subject headings: methods: data analysis — (stars:) planetary systems — 1.INTRODUCTION Short-period exoplanets are expected to have atmo- spheric compositions and dynamics that differ signifi- cantly from Solar System giant planets3. These planets orbit∼100×closer to their host stars than Jupiter does from the Sun. As a result, they receive ∼104×more flux andexperiencetidalforces ∼106×strongerthanJupiter. In contrast to Jupiter, which releases roughly as much power in its interior as it receives from the Sun, short- period exoplanets have power budgets dictated by the flux they receive from their host stars. Roughly speak- ing, the stellar flux incident on a planet does one of two things: it is reflected back into space, or advected else- where on the planet and re-radiated at different wave- lengths. The physical parameters that describe these processes are the planet’s Bond albedo and redistribu- tion efficiency. 1.1.Albedo 1CIERA Fellow, Northwestern University, 2131 Tech Dr, Evanston, IL 60208 email: n-cowan@northwestern.edu 2Astronomy Department, University of Washington, Box 351580, Seattle, WA 98195 3For our purposes a “short period” exoplanet is one where the periastron distance is less than 0 .1 AU, regardless of its actual period, and regardless of mass, which may range from Neptune - sized to Brown Dwarf. They are all Class IV and V extrasolar giant planets in the scheme of Sudarsky et al. (2003).Giant planets in the Solar System have albedos greater than 50%because ofthe presenceofcondensedmolecules (H2O, CH 4, NH3, etc.) in their atmospheres. Planets with effective temperatures exceeding ∼400 K should be cloud free, leading to albedos of 0.05–0.4 (Marley et al. 1999). If pressure-broadenedNa and K opacity is impor- tant at optical wavelengths (as it is for brown dwarfs, Burrows et al. 2000), then the Bond albedos of hot Jupiters may be less than 10% (Sudarsky et al. 2000). But the very hottest planets, the so-called class V extra- solar giant planets ( Teff>1500 K), might have very high albedosdue to a high silicate cloud layer(Sudarsky et al. 2000). For a planet whose albedo is dominated by clouds (as opposed to Rayleigh scattering) the albedo depends on the composition and size of cloud particles (Seager et al. 2000). Earlyattempts to observe reflected light from exoplan- ets (Charbonneau et al. 1999; Collier Cameron et al. 2002a; Leigh et al. 2003a,b; Rodler et al. 2008, 2010) in- dicated that they might not be as reflective as Solar Sys- tem gas giants (for a review, see Langford et al. 2010). Measurements of HD 209458b taken with the Cana- dian MOST satellite revealed a very low albedo ( <8%, Rowe et al.2008), andit hassincebeentakenforgranted that all short-period planets have albedos on par with that of charcoal. From the standpoint of the planet’s climate, the im- portant factor is not the albedo at any one wavelength,2 Cowan & Agol Aλ, but rather the integrated albedo, weighted by the in- cident stellar spectrum, known as the Bond albedo and denoted in this paper as AB. The relation between Aλ and the planet’s Bond albedo is not trivial. If the albedo is dominated by gray clouds, then the albedo at a sin- gle wavelength can indeed be extrapolated to obtain AB. For non-grayreflectance spectra, however, it is critical to measureAλat the peak emitting wavelength of the host startoobtainagoodestimateofthe planet’senergybud- get. For example, as pointed out in Marley et al. (1999), planets with identical albedo spectra, Aλ, mayhaveradi- cally different ABdepending on the spectraltype oftheir host stars. 1.2.Redistribution Efficiency The first few measurements of hot Jupiter phase vari- ations showed signs that these planets are not all cut from the same cloth. Harrington et al. (2006) and Knutson et al. (2007a) quoted very different phase func- tion amplitudes for the υAndromeda and HD 189733 systems. It was not clear whether the differences were intrinsic to the planets, however, because the data were taken with different instruments, at different wave- lengths, and with very different observation schemes (in any case, subsequent re-analysis of the original data and newly aquired Spitzerobservations of υAndromeda b paint a completely different picture of that system: Crossfield et al. 2010). The uniform study presented in Cowan et al. (2007), on the other hand, showed that HD 179949b and HD209458bexhibit significantlydifferentdegreesofheat recirculation, confirming suspicions. But it was not clear whether hot exoplanets were uni-modal or bi-modal in redistribution: are HD 179949b and HD 209458b end- members of a single distribution, or prototypes for two fundamentally different sorts of exoplanets? The presence or lack of a stratospheric tempera- ture inversion (Hubeny et al. 2003; Fortney et al. 2006; Burrows et al. 2007, 2008; Zahnle et al. 2009) on the day-sides of exoplanets has been invoked to explain a purported bi-modality in recirculation efficiency on hot Jupiters (Fortney et al. 2008). The argument, sim- ply put, is that optical absorbers high in the atmo- sphere of extremely hot Jupiters (equilibrium temper- atures greater than ∼1700 K) would absorb incident photons where the radiative timescales are short, mak- ingit difficult forthese planets torecirculateenergy. The most robust detection of this temperature inversionis for HD 209458b (Knutson et al. 2008), but this planet does not exhibit a large day-night brightness contrast at 8 µm (Cowan et al. 2007). So while temperature inversions seem to exist in the majority of hot Jupiter atmospheres (Knutson et al. 2010), their connection to circulation ef- ficiency —if any— is not clear. 1.3.Outline of Paper It has been suggested (e.g., Harrington et al. 2006; Cowan et al. 2007) that observations of secondary eclipses and phase variations each constrain a combina- tion of a planet’s Bond albedo and circulation efficiency. But observations —even phase variations— at a single waveband do little to constrain a planet’s energy bud- get. In this work we show how observations in differentwavebands and for different planets can be meaningfully combined to estimate these planetary parameters. In§2 we introduce a simple model to quantify the day-side and night-side energy budget of a short-period planet, and show how a planet’s Bond albedo, AB, and redistribution efficiency, ε, can be constrained by ob- servations. In §3 we use published observations of 24 transiting planets to estimate day-side and —where appropriate—night-sideeffective temperatures. We con- struct a two-dimensionaldistribution function in ABand εin§4. We state our conclusions in §5. 2.PARAMETERIZING THE ENERGY BUDGET 2.1.Incident Flux Short-period planets have a power budget entirely dic- tated by the flux they receive from their host star, which dwarfs tidal heating or remnant heat of forma- tion. Following Hansen (2008), we define the equi- librium temperature at the planet’s sub-stellar point: T0(t) =Teff(R∗/r(t))1/2, whereTeffandR∗are the star’s effective temperature and radius, and r(t) is the planet– star distance (for a circular orbit ris simply equal to the semi-major axis, a). For shorthand, we define the geo- metrical factor a∗=a/R∗, which is directly constrained by transit lightcurves (Seager & Mall´ en-Ornelas 2003). The incident flux on the planet is given by Finc= 1 2σBT4 0, and it is significant that this quantity has some associated uncertainty. For a planet on a circular orbit, the uncertainty in T0=Teff/√a∗is related —to first order— to the uncertainties in the host star’s effective temperature, and the geometrical factor: σ2 T0 T2 0=σ2 Teff T2 eff+σ2 a∗ 4a2∗. (1) For a planet with non-zero eccentricity, T0varies with time, but we are only concerned with its value at su- perior conjunction: secondary eclipse occurs at superior conjunction, when we are seeing the planet’s day-side. At that point in the orbit, the planet–star distance is rsc=a(1−e2)/(1−esinω), whereeandωare the planet’s orbital eccentricity and argument of periastron, respectively. For planets with non-zero eccentricity, the uncertainty inT0is given by σ2 T0 T2 0=σ2 Teff T2 eff+σ2 a∗ 4a2∗+/parenleftBig e2cos2ω 1−e2/parenrightBig σ2 ecosω +/parenleftBig esinω 1−e2−1 2(1−esinω)/parenrightBig σ2 esinω,(2) whereσecosωandσesinωarethe observationaluncertain- ties in the two components of the planet’s eccentricity4. 2.2.Emergent Flux At secondary eclipse, and in the absence of albedo or energy circulation, the equilibrium temperature of a re- gion on the planet depends on the normalized projected 4This formulation is preferable to an error estimate based on σe andσω, because the eccentricity and argument of periastron are highlycorrelated inorbitalfits. Thatsaid, the uncertaint iesσecosω andσesinωare often not included in the literature, in which case we use a slightly different —and more conservative— formulat ion of the error budget using σeandσω.Albedo and Heat Recirculation on Hot Exoplanets 3 distance,γ, from the center of the planetary disc as T(γ) =T0(1−γ2)1/8. The thermal secondary eclipse depth in this limit is given by: Fday F∗=/parenleftbiggRp R∗/parenrightbigg2/parenleftbigghc λkT0/parenrightbigg8/parenleftBig ehc/λkT∗ b−1/parenrightBig ×/integraldisplay(λkT0/hc)8 0dx exp(x−1/8)−1, (3) whereT∗ bis the brightness temperature of the star at wavelength λ. In the no-circulation limit, then, the day-side emer- gent spectrum is not exactly that of a blackbody, even if each annulus has a blackbody spectrum. But these differences are not important for the present study, since we are concerned with bolometric flux. By integrating Equation 3 over λ, one obtains the effective tempera- tureoftheday-sideintheno-albedo,no-circulationlimit: Tε=0= (2/3)1/4T0(see also Burrows et al. 2008; Hansen 2008). Indeed, treatingtheplanet’sday-sideasauniform hemisphere emitting at this temperature gives nearly the same wavelength dependence as the more complex Equa- tion 3. The Tε=0temperatures for our sample of 24 tran- siting planets are shown in Table 1. These set the max- imum possible day-side effective temperature we should expect to measure. The integrated day-side flux in the general —non-zero circulation— case is more subtle: heat may be trans- ported to the planet’s night-side, and/or to its poles. In this paper we neglect the E-W asymetry in the planet’s temperature map due to zonal flows and hence phase offsets in the thermal phase variations. Under this as- sumption, the day-night temperature contrast can more directly be extracted from the observed thermal phase variations. In practice, manystudies haveadopted asingle param- eter to represent bothzonal and meridional transport. It is instructive to consider the apparent day-side effective temperatures in variouslimits: uniform day-sidetemper- ature andT= 0 on the night-side (this is often referred to as the planet’s “equilibrium temperature”): Tequ= (1/2)1/4T0; in the case of perfect longitudinal transport but no latitudinal transport: Tlong= (8/(3π2))1/4T0; and in the limit of a uniform temperature everywhere on the planet: Tuni= (1/4)1/4T0. Comparing the apparent day-side temperatures in the three limits of circulation above leads to the following simple parametrization of the day-side effective temper- ature in terms of the planetary albedo, AB, and circula- tion efficiency, ε: Td=T0(1−AB)1/4/parenleftbigg2 3−5 12ε/parenrightbigg1/4 ,(4) where 0< ε <1. Note that εis related to —but dif- ferent from— the ǫused in (Cowan & Agol 2010). The former is merely a parametrization of the observed disk- integrated effective temperature, while the latter, which can take values from 0 to ∞, is a precisely defined ratio of radiative and advective timescales. The ǫ= 0 case is precisely equal to the ε= 0 case, while the ǫ→ ∞limit is equivalent to ǫ≈0.95. Our definition of εis similar to the Burrows et al.(2006) definition of Pnandyieldsthe sameno-circulation limit. But our ε= 1 limit produces a lower day-side brightness than the Pn= 0.5 limit, because we as- sume that the planet’s day-side has a uniform tempera- ture distribution in that limit (for a discussion of differ- ent redistribution parameterizations, see the appendix of Spiegel & Burrows 2010). In reality, efficient longitudinal transport (read: fast zonalwinds) mayleadtomorebandingandthereforeless efficient latitudinal transport. So one could argue that in the limit of perfect day-night temperature homoge- nization, both the day and night apparent temperatures should beTd= (8/(3π2))1/4T0, in between the Burrows et al. value of Td= (1/3)1/4T0and that suggested by our parameterization, Td= (1/4)1/4T0. At moderate day-night recirculation efficiencies, however, there is a good deal of latitudinal transport (I. Dobbs-Dixon, priv. comm.), so implicitly assuming a constant T∝cos1/4 latitudinal dependence —as done by Burrows et al.— is not founded, either. The bottom line is that any single- parameter implementation of advection is incapable of capturing the real complexities involved, but longitudi- nal transport is the dominant factor in determining day and night effective temperatures. Not withstanding the subtleties discussed above and noting that cooling tends to latitudinaly homogenize night-side temperatures (Cowan & Agol 2010), we get a night-side temperature of: Tn=T0(1−AB)1/4/parenleftBigε 4/parenrightBig1/4 . (5) Note thatTdandTnare the equator-weighted tempera- tures of their respective hemispheres (ie, as seen by an edge-on viewer). As such, they will tend to be slightly higher than the hemisphere-averaged temperature, ex- cept in the ε= 1 limit. This is also why the quantity T4 d+T4 nis still a weak function of ε. Fig. 1.— Different kinds of idealized observations constrain the Bond albedo, ABand circulation efficiency, ε, differently. A mea- surement of the secondary eclipse depth at optical waveleng ths is a measure of albedo (solid line). A secondary eclipse depth a t thermal wavelengths gives a joint constraint on albedo and r ecir- culation (dotted line). A measurement of the night-side effe ctive temperature from thermal phase variations yields a constra int (the dashed line) nearly orthogonal to the day-side measurement . In Figure 1 we show how different kinds of observa-4 Cowan & Agol tions constrain ABandε. For this example, we chose constraints consistent with AB= 0.2 andε= 0.3. The solid line is a locus of constant AB; the dotted line is the locus of constant Td/T0; the dashed line is a lo- cus of constant Tn/T0. From this figure it is clear that the measurements complement each other: measuring two of the three quantities (Bond albedo, effective day- side or night-side temperatures) uniquely determines the planet’s albedo and circulation efficiency. When obser- vations have some associated uncertainty, they define a swath through the AB–εplane. 3.ANALYSIS 3.1.Planetary & Stellar Data We begin by considering all the photometric obser- vations of short-period exoplanets published through November 2010, summarized in Table 1. We have dis- carded photometric observations of non-transiting plan- ets because of their unknown radius and orbital inclina- tion5. This leaves us with 24 transiting exoplanets for which there are observations in at least one waveband at superior conjunction, and in some cases in multiple wavebands and at multiple planetary phases. Stellar and planetary data are taken from the Ex- oplanet Encyclopedia (exoplanet.eu), and references therein. We repeated parts of the analysis with the Exoplanet Data Explorer database (exoplanets.org) and found identical results, within the uncertainties. When the stellar data are not available, we have assumed typi- cal parameters for the appropriate spectral class, and so- lar metallicity. Insofar as we are only concerned with the broadband brightnesses of the stars, our results should not depend sensitively on the input stellar parameters. Knowing the stars’ Teff, loggand [Fe/H], we use the PHOENIX/NextGen stellar spectrum grids (Hauschildt et al. 1999) to determine their brightness temperatures at the observed bandpasses. At each wave- band for which eclipse or phase observations have been obtained, we determine the ratio of the stellar flux to the blackbodyfluxatthatgridstar’s Teff. Wethenapplythis factor to the Teffof the observed star. It is worth noting that the choice of stellar model leads to systematic uncertainties in the planetary brightness that are of order the photometric uncertainties. For example, Christiansen et al. (2010) use stellar models for HAT-P-7 from Kurucz (2005), while we use those of Hauschildt et al. (1999). The resulting 8 µm bright- ness temperatures for HAT-P-7b differ by as much as 600 K, or slightly more than 1 σ. Our uniform use of Hauschildt et al. (1999) models should alleviate this problem, however. 3.2.From Flux Ratios to Effective Temperature The planet’s albedo and recirculation efficiency gov- ern its effective day-side and night-side temperatures, Td andTn, respectively. Observationally, we can only mea- sure the brightness temperature, ideally at a number of different wavelengths: Tb(λ). If one knew, a priori, the 5For completeness, these are: τ-Bootis b, υ-Andromeda b, 51 Peg b, Gl 876d, HD 75289b, HD 179949b and HD 46375b (Charbonneau et al. 1999; Collier Cameron et al. 2002b; Leigh et al. 2003a,b; Harrington et al. 2006; Cowan et al. 200 7; Seager & Deming 2009; Crossfield et al. 2010; Gaulme et al. 201 0)emergent spectrum of a planet, one could trivially con- vert a single brightness temperature to an effective tem- perature. Alternatively, if observations were obtained at a number of wavelengths bracketing the planet’s black- body peak, it would be possible to estimate the planet’s bolometric flux and hence its effective temperature in a model-independent way (e.g., Barman 2008). We adopt the latter empirical approach of converting observed flux ratios into brightness temperatures, then using these to estimate the planet’s effective tempera- ture. The secondary eclipse depth in some waveband di- vided by the transit depth is a direct measureofthe ratio of the planet’s day-side intensity to the star’s intensity at that wavelength, ψ(λ). Knowing the star’s brightness temperature at a given wavelength, it is possible to com- pute the apparent brightness temperature of the planet’s day side: Tb(λ) =hc λk/bracketleftbigg log/parenleftbigg 1+ehc/λkT∗ b(λ)−1 ψ(λ)/parenrightbigg/bracketrightbigg−1 .(6) On the Rayleigh-Jeans tail, the fractional uncertainty in the brightness temperature is roughly equal to the fractional uncertainty in the eclipse depth; on the Wien tail, the fractional error on brightness temperature can be smaller because the flux is very sensitive to tempera- ture. By the same token, a secondary eclipse depth and phase variation amplitude at a given wavelength can be combined to obtain a measure of the planet’s night-side brightness temperature at that waveband. Since the albedo and recirculation efficiency of the planet are not known ahead of time, it is not immedi- atelyobviouswhich wavelengthsaresensitiveto reflected light and which are dominated by thermal emission. For each planet, we compute the expected blackbody peak if the planet has no albedo and no recirculation of energy, λε=0= 2898/Tε=0µm. Insofar as real planets will have non-zero albedo and non-zero recirculation, the day side should never reach Tε=0, and the actual spectral energy distributionwillpeakatslightlylongerwavelengths. The coolest planet in our sample, Gl 436b, would exhibit a blackbody peak at λε=0= 3.1µm, while the hottest planet we consider, WASP-12b, has λε=0= 0.9µm. In practice this means that ground-based near-IR and space-based mid-IR (e.g., Spitzer) observations are as- sumed to measure thermal emission, while space-based optical observations (MOST, CoRoT, Kepler) may be contaminated by reflected starlight. In Figure2, wedemonstratetwo alternativetechniques to convert an array of brightness temperatures, Tb(λ), into an estimate of a planet’s effective temperature, Teff. The solid black line shows a model spectrum of ther- mal emission from Fortney et al. (2008), with an ef- fective temperature of Teff= 1941 K shown with the black dashed line. The expected blackbody peak of the planet is marked with a vertical dotted line. The red points are the expected brightness temperatures in the J, H, and K sbands (crosses), as well as the IRAC (asterisks) and MIPS (diamond) instruments on Spitzer (Fazio et al. 2004; Rieke et al. 2004; Werner et al. 2004). Since the majority of the observations of exoplanets have been obtained with SpitzerIRAC, we focus on estimat- ingTeffbasedonlyon brightness temperatures in thoseAlbedo and Heat Recirculation on Hot Exoplanets 5 Fig. 2.— The solid black line shows a model spectrum from Fortney et al. (2008) including only thermal emission (ie: n o re- flected light). The planet’s effective temperature is shown w ith the black dashed line, while the expected wavelength of the blac kbody peak of the planet is marked with a black dotted line. The red points show the expected brightness temperatures in the J, H , and Ksbands (crosses), as well as the IRAC (asterisks) and MIPS (di a- mond) instruments on Spitzer. The linear interpolation technique described in the text is shown with the red line. four bandpasses. Wien Displacement: The first approach is to simply adopt the brightness temperature of the bandpass clos- est to the planet’s blackbody peak (the black dotted line). If only the four IRAC channels are available, the best one can do is the 3.6 µm measurement, yielding Teff= 1925 K. There is —however— some subtlety in estimating the peak wavelength, as this is dependent on knowing the planet’s temperature (and hence ABandε) a priori. Linear Interpolation: The linear interpolation tech- nique, shown with the red line in Figure 2, obviates the need for an estimate of the planet’s temperature. The brightness temperature is assumed to be constant short- ward of the shortest- λobservation, and longward of the longest-λobservation. Between bandpasses, the bright- ness temperature changes linearly with λ. As long as the various brightness temperatures do not differ grossly from one another, this technique implicitly gives more weight to observations near the hypothetical blackbody peak. The bolometric flux of this “model” spectrum is then computed, and admits a single effective tempera- ture, which is Teff= 1927 K for the current example. Since we hope to apply our routine to planets with well sampled blackbody peaks, we adopt the linear interpola- tion technique, as it can make use of multiple brightness temperature estimates near the peak. Thetwotechniquesdescribedaboveproducesimilaref- fective temperatures, though —unsurprisingly— neither gives precisely the correct answer. But these system- atic errors are comparable or smaller than the photo- metric uncertainty in observations of individual bright- ness temperatures (see Table 1). The best IR observa- tions for the nearest, brightest planetary systems (e.g., HD 189733b and HD 209458b) lead to observational un- certainties of approximately 50 K in brightness temper- ature. For many planets, the uncertainty is 100–200 K. By that metric, either the Wien displacement or the lin- ear interpolation routines give adequate estimates of the effective temperature, with errors of 16 K and 14 K, re-spectively. Wemakeamorequantitativeanalysisofthesystematic uncertainties involved in the Linear Interpolation tem- perature estimates as follows. We produce 8800 mock data sets: 100 realizations for 11 models and data in up to 8 wavebands (J, H, K, IRAC, MIPS; Since this nu- mericalexperiment choosesrandom bands from the eight available, the results should not be very different if ad- ditional wavebands are considered). We run our Linear Interpolation technique on each of these and plot in Fig- ure 3 the estimated day-side temperature normalized by the actual model effective temperature versus the num- ber of wavebands used in the estimate. The temperature estimates cluster near Test/Teff= 1, indicating that the technique is not significantly biased. The scatter in es- timates decreases as more wavebands are used, from a standard deviation of 7.6% if only a single brightness temperature is used, down to 2.4% if photometry is ac- quired in eight bands. We incorporate this systematic error into our analysis by adding it in quadrature to the observational uncertainties described in the follow- ing paragraph. This has the desirable effect that planets with fewer observations have a larger systematic uncer- tainty on their effective temperature. Fig. 3.— The Linear Interpolation technique for estimating day- side effective as tested on a suite of eleven hot Jupiter spect ral models provided by J.J. Fortney. The y-axis shows the estima ted day-side effective temperature normalized by the actual mod el ef- fective temperature. The x-axis represents the number of br ight- ness temperatures used in the estimate. Each color correspo nds to one of the eleven models used in the comparison. The black err or bars represent the standard deviation in the normalized tem pera- ture estimates. Inpractice,wewouldliketopropagatethephotometric uncertainties to the estimate of Teff. For the Wien Dis- placement technique, this uncertainty propagates triv- ially to the effective temperature. For the linear inter- polation technique, a Monte Carlo can be used to esti- mate the uncertainty in Teff: the input eclipse depths are randomly shifted 1000 times in a manner consistent with their photometric uncertainties —assuming Gaus- sianerrors—andtheeffectivetemperatureisrecomputed repeatedly. Thescatterintheresultingvaluesof Teffpro- vides an estimate of the observational uncertainty in the parameter, to which we add in quadrature the estimate ofsystematicerrordescribedabove. The resultinguncer- tainties are listed in Table 1. These uncertainties should6 Cowan & Agol be compared to the uncertainties in Tε=0(also listed in Table 1), which are computed using the uncertainty in the star’s properties and the planet’s orbit. There are two practical issues with the linear interpo- lation temperature estimation technique. In some cases, onlyupperlimitshavebeenobtained, thereforeonecould setψ= 0, with the appropriate1-sigmauncertainty. But this approach leads to huge uncertainties in Tefffor plan- ets with a secondary eclipse upper-limit near their black- body peak. Instead of “punishing” these planets, we opt to not use upper-limits (though for completeness we in- clude them in Table 1). Secondly, when multiple mea- surements of an eclipse depth have been published for a given waveband, we use the most recent observation, indicated with a superscript “ e” in Table 1. In all cases these observations either explicitly agree with their older counterpart, or agree with the re-analyzed older data. 4.RESULTS 4.1.Looking for Reflected Light For each planet, we use thermal observations (essen- tially those in the J, H, K s, andSpitzerbands) to es- timate the planet’s effective day-side temperature, Td, and —when phase variations are available— Tn. These values are listed in Table 1. In five cases (CoRoT- 1b, CoRoT-2b, HAT-P-7b, HD 209458b, TrES-2b), sec- ondary eclipses and/or phase variations have been ob- tained at optical wavelengths. Such observations have the potential to directly constrain the albedo of these planets. One approach is to adopt the Tdfrom thermal observations and calculate the expected contrast ratio at optical wavelengths, under the assumption of blackbody emission (see also Kipping & Bakos 2010). Insofar as the observed eclipse depths are deeper than this calcu- lated depth, one can invoke the contribution of reflected light and compute a geometric albedo, Ag. If one treats the planet as a uniform Lambert sphere, the geometric albedo is related to the spherical albedo at that wave- length byAλ=3 2Ag. These values are listed in Table 1. But reflected light is not the only explanation for an unexpectedly deep optical eclipse. Alternatively, the emissivity of the planets may simply be greater at op- tical wavelengths than at mid-IR wavelengths, in agree- mentwith realisticspectralmodelsofhotJupiters, which predict brightness temperatures greater than Teffon the Wien tail (see, for example, the Fortney et al. model showninFigure2, whichdoesnotincludereflectedlight). Note that this increasein emissivityshould occurregard- less of whether or not the planet has a stratosphere: by definition, the depth at which the optical thermal emis- sion is emitted is the depth at which incident starlight is absorbed, which will necessarily be a hot layer — assuming the incident stellar spectrum peaks in the op- tical. Determining the albedo directly (ie: by observing re- flected light) can be difficult for short period planets, because there is no way to distinguish between reflected and re-radiated photons. The blackbody peaks of the star and planet often differ by less than a micron. There- fore, unlike Solar System planets, these worlds do not exhibit a minimum in their spectral energy distribution between the reflected and thermal peaks. The hottest —and therefore most ambiguous case— of the five tran-siting planets with optical constraints is HAT-P-7b. If one takes the mid-IR eclipse depths at face value, the planet has a day-side effective temperature of ∼2000 K. When combined with the Kepler observations, one com- putesanalbedoofgreaterthan50%. Thelargeday-night amplitude seen in the Kepler bandpass is then simply due to the fact that the planet’s night-side reflects no starlight, and the cool day-side can be attributed to high ABand/orε. If, on the other hand, one takes the op- tical flux to be entirely thermal in origin ( Aλ= 0), the day-side effective temperature is ∼2800 K. This is very close to that planet’s Tε=0, leaving very little power left for the night-side, again explaining the large day-night contrast observed by Kepler. The truth probably lies somewhere between these two extremes, but in any case this degeneracy will be neatly broken with Warm Spitzer observations: the two scenarios outlined above will lead to small and large thermal phase variations, respectively. It is telling that the only optical measurement in Table 1 that is unanimously considered to constrain albedo — and not thermal emission— is the MOST observations of HD 209458b (Rowe et al. 2008), the coolest of the five transiting planets with optical photometric constraints. The bottom line is that extracting a constraint on re- flected light from optical measurements of hot Jupiters is best done with a detailed spectral model. But even when reflectedlightcanbedirectlyconstrained,convertingthis constraint on Aλinto a constraint on ABalso requires detailedknowledgeofboththestarandtheplanet’sspec- tral energy distributions, making for a model-dependent exercise. 4.2.Populating the AB-εPlane Setting aside optical eclipses and direct measurements of albedo, we may use the rich near- and mid-IR data to constrain the Bond albedo and redistribution efficiency of short-period giant planets. We define a 20 ×20 grid in ABandεand use Equations 4 & 5 to calculate the nor- malized day-side and night-side effective temperatures, Td/T0andTn/T0, at each grid point, ( i,j). For each planet, we have an observational estimate of the day-side effective temperature, and in three cases we also have an estimate of the night-side effective temperature (as well as associated uncertainties). We first verifywhether ornot the observationsarecon- sistent with a single ABandε. To evaluate this “null hypothesis”, we compute the usual χ2=/summationtext24 i=1(model− data)2/error2at each grid point. We use only the esti- mates of day-side and (when available) night-side effec- tive temperatures to calculate the χ2, giving us 27-2=25 degreesoffreedom. The“best-fit”has χ2= 132(reduced χ2= 5.3), so the current observations strongly rule out a single Bond albedo and redistribution efficiency for all 24 planets. For 21 of the 24 planets considered here, we construct a two-dimensional distribution function for each planet as follows: PDF(i,j) =1/radicalbig 2πσ2 de−(Td−Td(i,j))2/(2σd)2.(7) This defines a swath through parameter space with the same shape as the dotted line in Figure 1. For the three remaining planets (HD 149026b,Albedo and Heat Recirculation on Hot Exoplanets 7 HD 189733b, HD 209458b), phase variation measure- ments help break the degeneracy: PDF(i,j) =1√ 2πσ2 de−(Td−Td(i,j))2/(2σd)2 ×1√ 2πσ2ne−(Tn−Tn(i,j))2/(2σn)2.(8) Fig. 4.— The global distribution function for short-period exo- planets in the AB–εplane. The gray-scale shows the sum of the normalized probability distribution function for the 24 pl anets in our sample. The data mostly consist of infrared day-side flux es, leading to the dominant degeneracy (see first the dotted line in Figure 1). We create a two-dimensional normalized probability distribution function (PDF) for each planet, then add these together to create the global PDF shown in Fig- ure 4. This is a democratic way of representing the data, since each planet’s distribution contributes equally. In Figures 5 and 6 we show the distribution functions for the albedo and circulation of the 24 planets in our sample,obtainedbymarginalizingtheglobalPDFofFig- ure 4 over either ABorε. Fig. 5.— The solid black line shows the projection of the 2- dimensional probability distribution function (the gray- scale of Figure 4) projected onto the ε-axis. The dashed line shows the ε-distribution if one requires that all planets have Bond alb edos less than 0.1; under this assumption, we see hints of a bimoda l distribution in heat circulation efficiency.Fig. 6.— The solid black line shows the projection of the 2- dimensionalprobabilitydistributionfunction (the gray- scale ofFig- ure 4) projected onto the AB-axis. The cumulative distribution function (not shown) yields a 1 σupper limit of AB<0.35. The solid line in Figure 5 shows no evidence of bi- modality in heat redistribution efficiency, although there is a wide range of behaviors. The dashed line in Figure 5 shows theε-distribution if one requires the albedo to be low,AB<0.1. There are then many high-recirculation planets, since advection is the only way to depress the day-side temperature in the absence of albedo. Inter- estingly, the dashed line doesshow tentative evidence of two separate peaks in ε: if short-period giant planets have uniformly low albedos, then there appear to be two modes of heat recirculation efficiency. We revisit this idea below. Figure 6 shows that planets in this sample are consis- tent with a low Bond albedo. Note that this constraint is based entirely on near- and mid-infrared observations, and is thus independent from the claims of low albedo based on searches for reflected light (Rowe et al. 2008, and references therein). Furthermore, this is a constraint on the Bond albedo, rather than the albedo in any lim- ited wavelength range. In Figure 7 we plot the dimensionless day-side effec- tive temperature, Td/T0, against the maximum expected day-side temperature, Tε=0. The cyan asterisks in Fig- ure 7 show the four hot Jupiters without temperature inversions, while most of the remaining planets have in- versions (Knutson et al. 2010). The presence or absence of an inversion does not appear to affect the efficiency of day–night heat recirculation. Planets should lie below the solid red line in Figure 7, which denotes Tε=0= (2/3)1/4T0. Of the 24 planets in our sample, only one (Gl 436b) has a day-side effective temperature significantly above the Tε=0limit6. This planet is by far the coolest in our sample, it is on an ec- centric orbit, and observations indicate that it may have a non-equilibrium atmosphere (Stevenson et al. 2010). There is no reason, on the other hand, that planets shouldn’t lie below the red dotted line in Figure 7: all it would take is non-zero Bond albedo. That said, only 3 of the 24 planets we consider are in this region, 6This is driven by the abnormally high 3.6 micron brightness temperature; including the 4.5 micron eclipse upper limit d oes not significantly change our estimate of this planet’s effective temper- ature.8 Cowan & Agol Fig. 7.— The dimensionless day-side effective temperature, Td/T0, plotted against the maximum expected day-side temper- ature,Tε=0. The red lines correspond to three fiducial limits of recirculation, assuming AB= 0: no recirculation (solid), uniform day-hemisphere (dashed), and uniform planet (dotted). The gray points indicate the default values (using only observation s with λ >0.8 micron) for the four planets whose optical eclipse depths may be probing thermal emission rather than just reflected li ght (from left to right: TrES-2b, CoRoT-2b, CoRoT-1b, HAT-P-7b ). For these planets we have here elected to include optical mea sure- ments in our estimate of the day-side bolometric flux and effec tive temperature, shown in black. The cyan asterisks denote thos e hot Jupiters known notto have a stratospheric inversion according to (Knutson et al. 2010). They are, from left to right: TrES-1 b, HD 189733b, TrES-3b, WASP-4b. The two red x’s denote the ec- centric planets in our sample, which are also the two worst ou tliers. with the greatest outlier being HD 80606b, a planet on an extremely eccentric orbit with superior conjunction nearly coinciding with periastron. As such, it is likely that much of the energy absorbed by the planet at that point in its orbit performs mechanical work (speeding up winds, puffingupthe planet, etc. SeealsoCowan & Agol 2010) rather than merely warming the gas. Gl 436b and HD 80606b are denoted by red x’s in Figure 7. The gray points in Figure 7 indicate the default val- ues (using only observationswith λ>0.8 micron) for the four planets whose optical eclipse depths may be probing thermal emission rather than just reflected light (from left to right: TrES-2b, CoRoT-2b, CoRoT-1b, HAT- P-7b). For these planets we have here elected to use all available flux ratios (including optical observations potentially contaminated by reflected light) to estimate the day-side bolometric flux and effective temperature, shown as black points in Figure 7. If one takes these day-side effective temperature es- timates at face value, it appears that the planets with Tε=0<2400 K exhibit a wide-variety of redistribution efficiencies and/or Bond albedos, but are consistent with AB= 0. It is worth noting that many of the best char- acterized planets in this region have Td/T0≈0.75, and this accounts for the sharp peak in the dotted line of Fig- ure 5 atε= 0.75. The hottest 6 planets, on the other hand, have uniformly high Td/T0, indicating that they have both low Bond albedo andlow redistribution effi- ciency. These planets must not have the high-altitude, reflective silicate clouds hypothesized in Sudarsky et al. (2000). But this conclusion is dependent on how one interprets the Keplerobservations of HAT-P-7b: if the large optical flux ratio is due to reflected light, then this planet is cooler than we think, and even the hottest tran-siting planets exhibit a variety of behaviors. 5.SUMMARY & CONCLUSIONS We have described how to estimate a planet’s incident power budget ( T0), where the uncertainties are driven by the uncertainties in the host star’s effective temperature and size, as well as the planet’s orbit. We then described a model-independent technique to estimate the effective temperature of a planet based on planet/star flux ra- tiosobtained at variouswavelengths. When the observed day-side and night-side effective temperatures are com- pared, one can constrain a combination of the planet’s Bond albedo, AB, and its recirculation efficiency, ε. We applied this analysis on 24 known transiting planets with measured infrared eclipse depths. Our principal results are: 1. Essentially all of the planets are consistent with low Bond albedo. 2. We firmly rule out the “null hypothesis”, whereby all transiting planets can be fit by a single ABandε. It is not immediately clear whether this stems from differ- ences in Bond albedo, recirculation efficiency, or both. 3. In the few cases where it is possible to unambiguously infer an albedo based on optical eclipse depths, they are extremely low, implying correspondingly low Bond albe- dos (<10%). If one adopts such low albedos for all the planets in our sample, the discrepancies in day-side effective temperature must be due to differences in recir- culation efficiency. 4. These differences in recirculation efficiency do not appear to be correlated with the presence or absence of a stratospheric inversion. 5. Planets cooler than Tε=0= 2400 K exhibit a wide va- riety of circulation efficiencies that do not appear to be correlated with equilibrium temperature. Alternatively, theseplanetsmayhavedifferent (but generallylow)albe- dos. Planets hotter than Tε=0= 2400 K have uniformly low redistribution efficiencies and albedos. The apparent decrease in advective efficiency with increasing planetary temperature remains unexplained. One hypothesis, mentioned earlier, is that TiO and VO would provide additional optical opacity in atmospheres hotter than T∼1700 K, leading to temperature in- versions and reduced heat recirculation on these plan- ets (Fortney et al. 2008). But if our sample shows any sharp change it behavior it occurs near 2400 K, rather than 1700K. One couldinvokeanotheroptical absorber, but in any case the lack of correlation —pointed out in thisworkandelsewhere—betweenthepresenceofatem- perature inversionand the efficiency of heat recirculation makes this explanation suspect. Another possible expla- nation for the observed trend is that the hottest planets have the most ionized atmospheres and may suffer the most severe magnetic drag (Perna et al. 2010). The simplest explanation for this trend is simply that the radiative time is a steeper function of temperature than the advective time: advective efficiency is given roughly by the ratio of the radiative and advective times (eg: Cowan & Agol 2010). In the limit of Newtonian cooling, the radiative time scales as τrad∝T−3. If one assumes the wind speed to be of order the local sound speed, then the advective time scales as τadv∝T−0.5. One might therefore naively expect the advective effi- ciency to scale as T−2.5. Such an explanation would notAlbedo and Heat Recirculation on Hot Exoplanets 9 explain the apparent sharp transition seen at 2400 K, however. The combination of optical observations of secondary eclipses and thermal observations of phase variations is the best way to constrain planetary albedo and circu- lation. The optical observations should be taken near the star’s blackbody peak, both to maximize signal-to- noise, and to avoidcontaminationfrom the planet’s ther- mal emission, but this separationmay not be possible for the hottest transiting planets. The thermal observations, likewise, should be near the planet’s blackbody peak to better constrain its bolometric flux. Note that this wave- length is shortwardof the ideal contrastratio, which typ- ically falls on the planet’s Rayleigh-Jeans tail. Further- more, the thermal phase observations should span a full planetaryorbit: thelightcurveminimumisthemostsen- sitive measure of ε, and should occur nearly half an orbit apart from the light curve maximum, despite skewed di- urnal heatingpatterns (Cowan & Agol 2008, 2010). This means that observing campaigns that only cover a little more than half an orbit (transit →eclipse) are probably underestimating the real peak-trough phase amplitude.A possible improvement to this study would be to per- form a uniform data reduction for all the Spitzerexo- planet observations of hot Jupiters. These data make up the majority of the constraints presented in our study and most are publicly available. And while the pub- lished observations were analyzed in disparate ways, a consensus approach to correcting detector systematics is beginning to emerge. N.B.C. acknowledges useful discussions of aspects of this work with T. Robinson, M.S. Marley, J.J. Fort- ney, T.S. Barman and D.S. Spiegel. Thanks to our referee B.M.S. Hansen for insightful feedback, and to E.D. Feigelson for suggestions about statistical methods. N.B.C. was supported by the Natural Sciences and Engi- neering Research Council of Canada. E.A. is supported by a National Science Foundation Career Grant. 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J. 2009, ApJ, 701, L20Albedo and Heat Recirculation on Hot Exoplanets 11 TABLE 1 Secondary Eclipses & Phase Variations of Exoplanets Planet Tε=0[K]aλ[µm]bEclipse DepthcTbright[K] Phase AmplitudecDerived Quantitiesd CoRoT-1b12424(84) 0.60(0.42) 1 .6(6)×10−42726(141) Td=2674(144) K 0.71(0.25) 1 .26(33)×10−42409(75) 1 .0(3)×10−4Aλ<0.1 2.10(0.02) 2 .8(5)×10−32741(125) Td(A= 0)=2515(84) K 2.15(0.32) 3 .36(42)×10−32490(157) 3.6(0.75) 4 .15(42)×10−32098(116) 4.5(1.0) 4 .82(42)×10−32084(106) CoRoT-2b21964(42) 0.60(0.42) 6(2) ×10−52315(85) Td=1864(233) K 0.71(0.25) 1 .02(20)×10−42215(49) Aλ= 0.16(7) 1.65(0.25) <1.7×10−3(3σ) Td(A= 0)=2010(144) K 2.15(0.32) 1 .6(9)×10−31914(292) 3.6(0.75) 3 .55(20)×10−31798(40) 4.5(1.0)e4.75(19)×10−31791(33) 4.5(1.0) 5 .10(42)×10−3 8.0(2.9) 4 .1(1.1)×10−3 8.0(2.9)e4.09(80)×10−31318(143) Gl 436b3934(41) 3.6(0.75) 4 .1(3)×10−41145(23) Td=1082(38) K 4.5(1.0) <1.0×10−4(3σ) 5.8(1.4) 3 .3(1.4)×10−4797(106) 8.0(2.9)e4.52(27)×10−4737(17) 8.0(2.9) 5 .7(8)×10−4 8.0(2.9) 5 .4(7)×10−4 16(5) 1 .40(27)×10−3963(126) 24(9) 1 .75(41)×10−31016(182) HAT-P-1b41666(38) 3.6(0.75) 8 .0(8)×10−41420(47) Td=1439(59) K 4.5(1.0) 1 .35(22)×10−31507(100) 5.8(1.4) 2 .03(31)×10−31626(128) 8.0(2.9) 2 .38(40)×10−31564(151) HAT-P-7b52943(95) 0.65(0.4) 1 .30(11)×10−43037(35) 1 .22(16)×10−4Td=2086(156) K 3.6(0.75) 9 .8(1.7)×10−42063(152) Aλ= 0.58(5) 4.5(1.0) 1 .59(22)×10−32378(179) Td(A= 0)=2830(86) K 5.8(1.4) 2 .45(31)×10−32851(235) 8.0(2.9) 2 .25(52)×10−32512(403) HD 80606b61799(50) 8.0(2.9) 1 .36(18)×10−31137(73) Td=1137(113) K HD 149026b71871(17) 8.0(2.9)e3.7(0.8)×10−4976(276) 2 .3(7)×10−4Td=1571(231) K 8.0(2.9) 8 .4(1.1)×10−4Tn=976(286) K HD 189733b81537(16) 2.15(32) <4.0×10−4(1σ) Td=1605(52) K 3.6(0.75) 2 .56(14)×10−31639(34) Tn=1107(132) K 4.5(1.0) 2 .14(20)×10−31318(45) 5.8(1.4) 3 .10(34)×10−31368(69) 8.0(2.9) 3 .381(55)×10−3 8.0(2.9) 3 .91(22)×10−31.2(2)×10−3 8.0(2.9)e3.440(36)×10−31259(7) 1 .2(4)×10−3 16(5) 5 .51(30)×10−31338(52) 24(9) 5 .98(38)×10−3 24(9)e5.36(27)×10−31202(46) 1 .3(3)×10−3 HD 209458b91754(15) 0.5(0.3) 7(9) ×10−62368(156) Td=1486(53) K 2.15(0.32) <3×10−4(1σ) Aλ= 0.09(7) 3.6(0.75) 9 .4(9)×10−41446(45) Td(A= 0)=2031(128) K 4.5(1.0) 2 .13(15)×10−31757(57) Tn=1476(304) K 5.8(1.4) 3 .01(43)×10−31890(149) 8.0(2.9) 2 .40(26)×10−31480(94) <1.5×10−3(2σ) 24(9) 2 .60(44)×10−31131(143) OGLE-TR-56b102874(84) 0.90(0.15) 3 .63(91)×10−42696(116) Td=2696(236) K OGLE-TR-113b111716(33) 2.15(0.32) 1 .7(5)×10−31918(164) Td=1918(219) K TrES-1b121464(16) 3.6(0.75) <1.5×10−3(1σ) Td=998(67) K 4.5(1.0) 6 .6(1.3)×10−4972(56) 8.0(2.9) 2 .25(36)×10−31152(94) TrES-2b131917(21) 0.65(0.4) 1 .14(78)×10−52020(132) Td=1623(76) K 2.15(0.32) 6 .2(1.2)×10−41655(80) Aλ= 0.06(3) 3.6(0.75) 1 .27(21)×10−31490(84) Td(A= 0) = 1751(80) K 4.5(1.0) 2 .30(24)×10−31652(74) 5.8(1.4) 1 .99(54)×10−31373(177) 8.0(2.9) 3 .59(60)×10−31659(163) TrES-3b142093(32) 0.7(0.3) <6.2×10−4(1σ) Td=1761(66) K 1.25(0.16) <5.1×10−4(3σ) 2.15(0.32) 2 .41(43)×10−3 2.15(0.32)e1.33(17)×10−31770(58) 3.6(0.75) 3 .46(35)×10−31818(73)12 Cowan & Agol TABLE 1 Secondary Eclipses & Phase Variations of Exoplanets 4.5(1.0) 3 .72(54)×10−31649(107) 5.8(1.4) 4 .49(97)×10−31621(173) 8.0(2.9) 4 .75(46)×10−31480(82) TrES-4b152250(37) 3.6(0.75) 1 .37(11)×10−31889(63) Td=1891(81) K 4.5(1.0) 1 .48(16)×10−31727(83) 5.8(1.4) 2 .61(59)×10−32112(283) 8.0(2.9) 3 .18(44)×10−32168(197) WASP-1b162347(35) 3.6(0.75) 1 .17(16)×10−31678(87) Td=1719(89) K 4.5(1.0) 2 .12(21)×10−31923(91) 5.8(1.4) 2 .82(60)×10−32042(253) 8.0(2.9) 4 .70(46)×10−32587(176) WASP-2b171661(69) 3.6(0.75) 8 .3(3.5)×10−41264(164) Td=1280(121) K 4.5(1.0) 1 .69(17)×10−31380(53) 5.8(1.4) 1 .92(77)×10−31299(232) 8.0(2.9) 2 .85(59)×10−31372(154) WASP-4b182163(60) 3.6(0.75) 3 .19(31)×10−32156(97) Td=2146(140) K 4.5(1.0) 3 .43(27)×10−31971(75) WASP-12b193213(119) 0.9(0.15) 8 .2(1.5)×10−43002(104) Td=2939(98) K 1.25(0.16) 1 .31(28)×10−32894(149) 1.65(0.25) 1 .76(18)×10−32823(88) 2.15(0.32) 3 .09(13)×10−33018(51) 3.6(0.75) 3 .79(13)×10−32704(49) 4.5(1.0) 3 .82(19)×10−32486(68) 5.8(1.4) 6 .29(52)×10−33167(179) 8.0(2.9) 6 .36(67)×10−32996(229) WASP-18b203070(50) 3.6(0.75) 3 .1(2)×10−33000(107) Td=2998(138) K 4.5(1.0) 3 .8(3)×10−33128(150) 5.8(1.4) 4 .1(2)×10−33095(103) 8.0(2.9) 4 .3(3)×10−32991(153) WASP-19b212581(49) 1.65(0.25) 2 .59(45)×10−32677(135) Td=2677(244) K XO-1b221526(24) 3.6(0.75) 8 .6(7)×10−41300(32) Td=1306(47) K 4.5(1.0) 1 .22(9)×10−31265(34) 5.8(1.4) 2 .61(31)×10−31546(89) 8.0(2.9) 2 .10(29)×10−31211(87) XO-2231685(33) 3.6(0.75) 8 .1(1.7)×10−41447(102) Td=1431(98) K 4.5(1.0) 9 .8(2.0)×10−41341(105) 5.8(1.4) 1 .67(36)×10−31497(155) 8.0(2.9) 1 .33(49)×10−31179(219) XO-3241982(82) 3.6(0.75) 1 .01(4)×10−31875(30) Td=1871(63) K 4.5(1.0) 1 .43(6)×10−31965(40) 5.8(1.4) 1 .34(49)×10−31716(330) 8.0(2.9) 1 .50(36)×10−31625(236) aThe planet’s expected day-side effective temperature in the absence of reflection or recirculation ( AB= 0,ε= 0). The 1 σuncertainty is shown in parenthese. bThe bandwidth is shown in parenthese. cEclipse depths and phase amplitudes are unitless, since the y are measured relative to stellar flux. dTdandTndenote the day-side and night-side effective temperatures o f the planet, as estimated from thermal secondary eclipse de pths and thermal phase variations, respectively. The estimated 1 σuncertainties are shown in parentheses. The default day-si de temperature is computed using only observations at λ >0.8µm. Eclipse measurements at shorter wavelengths may then be u sed to estimate the planet’s albedo at those wavelengths, Aλ. Note that this is a spherical albedo; the geometric albedo i s given by Ag=2 3Aλ. If —on the other hand— AB= 0 is assumed, then all the day-side flux is thermal, regardless of waveband , yielding the second Tdestimate. eWhen multiple measurements of an eclipse depth have been pub lished in a given waveband, we use the most recent observatio n. In all cases these observations are either explicitly agree with their o lder counterpart, or agree with the re-analyzed older data. 1Snellen et al. (2009); Alonso et al. (2009b); Gillon et al. (2 009); Rogers et al. (2009); Deming et al. (2010),2Alonso et al. (2009a); Snellen et al. (2010); Gillon et al. (2010); Alonso et al. (2010); Deming et al. (2010),3Deming et al. (2007); Demory et al. (2007); Stevenson et al. ( 2010); Knutson et al. in prep.,4Todorov et al. (2010),5Borucki et al. (2009); Christiansen et al. (2010),6Laughlin et al. (2009),7Knutson et al. (2009b),8Deming et al. (2006); Knutson et al. (2007a); Barnes et al. (2 007); Charbonneau et al. (2008); Knutson et al. (2009c); Ago l et al. (2010),9Richardson et al. (2003); Deming et al. (2005); Cowan et al. ( 2007); Rowe et al. (2008); Knutson et al. (2008),10Sing & L´ opez-Morales (2009),11Snellen & Covino (2007),12Charbonneau et al. (2005); Knutson et al. (2007b),13O’Donovan et al. (2010); Croll et al. (2010a); Kipping & Bakos (2010b),14Fressin et al. (2010); Croll et al. (2010b); Christiansen et al. (2010b),15Knutson et al. (2009a),16,17Wheatley et al. (2010),18Beerer et al. (2010),19L´ opez-Morales et al. (2010); Campo et al. (2010); Croll et a l. (2010c),20Nymeyer et al. (2010),21Anderson et al. (2010),22Machalek et al. (2008),23Machalek et al. (2009),24Machalek et al. (2010)