2026-06-01 シカゴ大学(UChicago)

Many planets in the universe may be hazed in clouds of soot, according to a new study by University of Chicago scientists. According to the analysis, high temperatures and crushing pressures on these planets could combine to make ‘soot factories,’ much like combustion engines here on Earth, which shroud the planets in smog.Illustration by Louise Lerner
<関連情報>
- https://news.uchicago.edu/story/many-planets-might-be-soot-factories-according-new-study
- https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.3847/2041-8213/ae6914
海王星以下の天体は煤の生成工場:深層大気における炭化水素の生成と冷却が海王星以下の天体エアロゾルの傾向の起源となる Sub-Neptunes as Soot Factories: Deep Atmosphere Hydrocarbon Formation and Quenching as the Origin of Sub-Neptune Aerosol Trends
Jeehyun Yang, Eliza M.-R. Kempton, and Arjun B. Savel
The Astrophysical Journal Letters Published: 2026 May 18
DOI:10.3847/2041-8213/ae6914
Abstract
Recent population-level studies of sub-Neptune atmospheres have identified a tentative parabolic trend in transmission spectrum amplitude for planets with Teq ≈ 500−800 K. While the trend has been commonly attributed to hydrocarbon aerosols, we lack a first-principles explanation of its underlying chemical mechanism. Previous work has focused on the role of methane photolysis and subsequent polymerization, but with limited reaction networks that truncated at C2 species and could not reproduce the observed parabolic trend. In this work, enabled by a computer-automated, rate-based chemical network generator, we construct the most comprehensive carbon reaction network for exoplanet atmospheres to date. We explicitly model the formation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), which are well established as soot precursors in combustion chemistry. We calculate the chemical timescales of hydrocarbon species through an eigenvalue timescale method and model their quenched abundances across a range of C/O, metallicities, and Teq. In this framework, the deep atmosphere acts as a “soot factory” analogous to a combustion engine, transporting the ingredients for hydrocarbon aerosol formation to the JWST-observable region of the atmosphere, where it may be further augmented by photochemistry. We find that the predicted abundances of PAHs peak near 600 K, and fall off toward higher and lower Teq, consistent with the observed muted-spectra regime suggested in observational studies by the Hubble Space Telescope and JWST. We also show that PAH abundances are expected to vary with C/O and metallicity, thus providing a natural explanation for observed diversity among planets with similar Teq.


