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  5. Potential climates and habitability on Gl 514 b: a super-Earth exoplanet with high eccentricity
 

Potential climates and habitability on Gl 514 b: a super-Earth exoplanet with high eccentricity

Journal
MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY  
Date Issued
2024
Author(s)
BIASIOTTI, Lorenzo  
•
SIMONETTI, Paolo Matteo  
•
VLADILO, Giovanni  
•
IVANOVSKI, Stavro Lambrov  
•
DAMASSO, Mario  
•
SOZZETTI, Alessandro  
•
MONAI, Sergio  
DOI
10.1093/mnras/stae1124
Abstract
The recently discovered super-Earth Gl 514 b, orbiting a nearby M0.5-1.0 star at 7.6 pc, is one of the best benchmark exoplanets for understanding the potential climate states of eccentric planets. The elongated (e = 0.45) orbit of Gl 514 b, which only partially lies in the Conservative Habitable Zone, suggests a dynamically young system, where the spin-orbit tidal synchronization may not have yet occurred up to the present time. In the present work, we use a seasonal-latitudinal energy balance model, EOS-ESTM, to explore the potential impact of both constrained and unconstrained planetary, orbital, and atmospheric parameters on the Gl 514 b habitability, mapped in terms of surface temperature. We test three distinct CO2-dominated atmospheres by varying the CH4 concentration values (0 per cent, 0.1 per cent, and 1 per cent) and the total surface pressure. As a general trend, we find that habitable conditions are favoured by high-CH4 and high-pressure regimes. Habitability also increases for high-axis obliquities (at least until the appearance of an icebelt), long-rotation periods, and high-ocean fractional coverage. If the ocean fraction is low, then also the argument of periastron becomes relevant. Our results are robust against changes of the continental distribution. Thus, we conclude that Gl 514 b can potentially maintain temperate surface conditions with modest seasonal temperature variations under a wide variety of planetary, orbital, and atmospheric conditions. Despite no transit have been detected yet, the results found in this work should motivate the community to invest time in future observations.
Volume
530
Issue
4
Start page
4300
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12386/36975
Url
https://academic.oup.com/mnras/article/530/4/4300/7659367?login=false
Issn Identifier
0035-8711
Rights
open.access
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stae1124.pdf

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2.61 MB

Format

Adobe PDF

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