Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Song, Xinyi, Yang, Jun, Ouyang, Yueyun
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.18437
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1866918397061627904
author Song, Xinyi
Yang, Jun
Ouyang, Yueyun
author_facet Song, Xinyi
Yang, Jun
Ouyang, Yueyun
contents More than 200 moons exist in our Solar System, yet no exomoon has been confirmed to date. While the innermost two planets of the Solar System lack natural satellites and most studies favour the existence of exomoons around long-period planets, some theoretical studies that take tidal dissipation, orbital decay, and migration processes into account suggest that exomoons may survive around short-period exoplanets. We investigated the impact of exomoons on planetary thermal phase curves and assessed their detectability within a theoretical framework. We simulated the thermal phase curves of exomoon-exoplanet systems, including mutual transits and occultations, and explored their dependence on planetary orbital periods across a wide range of systems. Close-in airless exomoons maintain large day-night temperature contrasts, amplifying the thermal phase-curve signal of the system. When the exomoon transits or is occulted by the exoplanet, the transit depth varies with the planetary phase, and the occultation depth varies with the exomoon's phase. The maximum occultation depth can reach $\sim$ 20 ppm for long-period systems. For short-period planets, the signal can reach up to $\sim$100 ppm, although such configurations may not be dynamically stable over long timescales. If exomoons are not accounted for, the planetary temperature distribution retrieved from observed thermal phase curves may overestimate the planetary day-night temperature contrast and underestimate the planetary horizontal heat transport. In principle, the periodic exomoon-exoplanet mutual occultation signal could be extracted using methods such as box-fitting least squares, providing a framework for future observational studies and instrument planning.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2603_18437
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle The influence of hypothetical exomoons on planetary thermal phase curves
Song, Xinyi
Yang, Jun
Ouyang, Yueyun
Earth and Planetary Astrophysics
More than 200 moons exist in our Solar System, yet no exomoon has been confirmed to date. While the innermost two planets of the Solar System lack natural satellites and most studies favour the existence of exomoons around long-period planets, some theoretical studies that take tidal dissipation, orbital decay, and migration processes into account suggest that exomoons may survive around short-period exoplanets. We investigated the impact of exomoons on planetary thermal phase curves and assessed their detectability within a theoretical framework. We simulated the thermal phase curves of exomoon-exoplanet systems, including mutual transits and occultations, and explored their dependence on planetary orbital periods across a wide range of systems. Close-in airless exomoons maintain large day-night temperature contrasts, amplifying the thermal phase-curve signal of the system. When the exomoon transits or is occulted by the exoplanet, the transit depth varies with the planetary phase, and the occultation depth varies with the exomoon's phase. The maximum occultation depth can reach $\sim$ 20 ppm for long-period systems. For short-period planets, the signal can reach up to $\sim$100 ppm, although such configurations may not be dynamically stable over long timescales. If exomoons are not accounted for, the planetary temperature distribution retrieved from observed thermal phase curves may overestimate the planetary day-night temperature contrast and underestimate the planetary horizontal heat transport. In principle, the periodic exomoon-exoplanet mutual occultation signal could be extracted using methods such as box-fitting least squares, providing a framework for future observational studies and instrument planning.
title The influence of hypothetical exomoons on planetary thermal phase curves
topic Earth and Planetary Astrophysics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.18437