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      A False Positive For Ocean Glint on Exoplanets: the Latitude-Albedo Effect

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          Abstract

          Identifying liquid water on the surface of planets is a high priority, as this traditionally defines habitability. One proposed signature of oceans is specular reflection ("glint"), which increases the apparent albedo of a planet at crescent phases. We post-process a global climate model of an Earth-like planet to simulate reflected lightcurves. Significantly, we obtain glint-like phase variations even though we do not include specular reflection in our model. This false positive is the product of two generic properties: 1) for modest obliquities, a planet's poles receive less orbit-averaged stellar flux than its equator, so the poles are more likely to be covered in highly reflective snow and ice, and 2) we show that reflected light from a modest-obliquity planet at crescent phases probes higher latitudes than at gibbous phases, therefore a planet's apparent albedo will naturally increase at crescent phase. We suggest that this "latitude-albedo effect" will operate even for large obliquities: in that case the equator receives less orbit-averaged flux than the poles, and the equator is preferentially sampled at crescent phase. Using rotational and orbital color variations to map the surfaces of directly imaged planets and estimate their obliquity will therefore be a necessary pre-condition for properly interpreting their reflected phase variations. The latitude-albedo effect is a particularly convincing glint false positive for zero-obliquity planets, and such worlds are not amenable to latitudinal mapping. This effect severely limits the utility of specular reflection for detecting oceans on exoplanets.

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          Most cited references1

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          Extraordinary climates of Earth-like planets: three-dimensional climate simulations at extreme obliquity

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            Author and article information

            Journal
            04 May 2012
            Article
            10.1088/2041-8205/752/1/L3
            1205.1058
            7a01ce1e-57b0-4708-99ff-5d249f2c4a57

            http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

            History
            Custom metadata
            5 pages, 3 figures, ApJL accepted
            astro-ph.EP

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