Bibcode
Weidner, C.; Horne, K.
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 521, id.A76
Advertised on:
10
2010
Journal
Citations
31
Refereed citations
29
Description
Aims: Current and upcoming space missions may be able to detect
moons of transiting extra-solar planets. In this context it is important
to understand if exomoons are expected to exist and what their possible
properties are. Methods: Using estimates for the stability of
exomoon orbits from numerical studies, a list of 87 known transiting
exoplanets is tested for the potential to host large exomoons.
Results: For 92% of the sample, moons larger than Luna can be excluded
on prograde orbits, unless the parent exoplanet's internal structure is
very different from the gas-giants of the solar system. Only WASP-24b,
OGLE2-TR-L9, CoRoT-3b and CoRoT-9b could have moons above 0.4 m_⊕,
which is within the likely detection capabilities of current
observational facilities. Additionally, the range of possible orbital
radii of exomoons of the known transiting exoplanets, with two
exceptions, is below 8 Jupiter-radii and therefore rather small.