English

Methane Planets and their Mass-Radius Relation

Earth and Planetary Astrophysics 2015-05-27 v2

Abstract

Knowledge of both the mass and radius of an exoplanet allows us to estimate its mean density, and therefore its composition. Exoplanets seem to fill a very large parameter space in terms of mass and composition, and unlike the solar-system's planets, exoplanets also have intermediate masses (~ 5 - 50 M_Earth) with various densities. In this letter, we investigate the behavior of the Mass-Radius relation for methane (CH_4) planets and show that when methane planets are massive enough (Mp >~ 15 M_Earth), the methane can dissociate and lead to a differentiated planet with a carbon core, a methane envelope, and a hydrogen atmosphere. The contribution of a rocky core to the behavior of CH_4 planet is considered as well. We also develop interior models for several detected intermediate-mass planets that could, in principle, be methane/methane-rich planets. The example of methane planets emphasizes the complexity of the Mass-Radius relation and the challenge involved in uniquely inferring the planetary composition.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1505.00139,
  title  = {Methane Planets and their Mass-Radius Relation},
  author = {Ravit Helled and Morris Podolak and Eran Vos},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1505.00139},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

Published in ApJL

R2 v1 2026-06-22T09:26:32.407Z