论文标题
木星和土星作为频谱类似物的光谱类似物和棕色矮人
Jupiter and Saturn as Spectral Analogs for Extrasolar Gas Giants and Brown Dwarfs
论文作者
论文摘要
随着直接成像光谱的出现,棕色矮人和极性气体巨头的光谱数量正在迅速增长。许多棕色矮人和极性气体巨头表现出光谱和光度变异性,这可能是天气模式的结果。但是,在可预见的将来,点源观测将是提取棕色矮人和系外行星光谱的唯一可行的方法。模型已经能够重现观察到的可变性,但是需要进行基础真理观察以验证其结果。为此,我们提供了从\ emph {cassini} vims仪器获得的木星和土星的视觉和近红外光谱。我们将VIMS光谱立方体融合,以模拟木星和土星的光谱,就好像它们是直接成像的系外行星或棕色矮人一样。我们为木星和土星提供了六个经验磁盘集成的光谱,分别为$ 1.7^\ circ $至$ 133.5^\ circ $和$ 39.6^\ circ $ to $ 110.2^\ circ $。为了了解这些磁盘集成光谱的成分,我们还为照明和云密度的排列以及土星的戒指提供了最终成员(单个特征)光谱。在同时,这些磁盘集成和终端的构件光谱提供了分析来自气体外气体巨头和棕色矮人的点源光谱所需的基础真实。最后,我们讨论了冰冷的环(例如土星)对磁盘集成光谱的影响,并考虑从直接成像光谱中推断环的存在的可行性。
With the advent of direct imaging spectroscopy, the number of spectra from brown dwarfs and extrasolar gas giants is growing rapidly. Many brown dwarfs and extrasolar gas giants exhibit spectroscopic and photometric variability, which is likely the result of weather patterns. However, for the foreseeable future, point-source observations will be the only viable method to extract brown dwarf and exoplanet spectra. Models have been able to reproduce the observed variability, but ground truth observations are required to verify their results. To that end, we provide visual and near-infrared spectra of Jupiter and Saturn obtained from the \emph{Cassini} VIMS instrument. We disk-integrate the VIMS spectral cubes to simulate the spectra of Jupiter and Saturn as if they were directly imaged exoplanets or brown dwarfs. We present six empirical disk-integrated spectra for both Jupiter and Saturn with phase coverage of $1.7^\circ$ to $133.5^\circ$ and $39.6^\circ$ to $110.2^\circ$, respectively. To understand the constituents of these disk-integrated spectra, we also provide end member (single feature) spectra for permutations of illumination and cloud density, as well as for Saturn's rings. In tandem, these disk-integrated and end member spectra provide the ground truth needed to analyze point source spectra from extrasolar gas giants and brown dwarfs. Lastly, we discuss the impact that icy rings, such as Saturn's, have on disk-integrated spectra and consider the feasibility of inferring the presence of rings from direct imaging spectra.