At least six intense nonthermal planetary radio emissions are known in our solar system: the auroral radio emissions from
the Earth, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune, and the radio bursts from the Io-Jupiter flux tube. The former are thought
to be driven by the solar wind flow pressure or energy flux on the magnetospheric cross-section, while the latter is a consequence
of the Io-Jupiter electrodynamic interaction. Although in the solar wind, the flow ram pressure largely dominates the magnetic
one, we suggest that the incident magnetic energy flux is the driving factor for all these six radio emissions, and that it
can be estimated in the same way in all cases. Consequences for the possible radio emission from extrasolar planets are examined.
‘Hot Jupiters’, if they are magnetized, might possess a radio emission several orders of magnitude stronger than the Jovian
one, detectable with large ground-based low-frequency arrays. On the other hand, `giants' analogous to the Io-Jupiter interaction
in the form of a pair star/hot-Jupiter are unlikely to produce intense radio emissions, unless the star is very strongly magnetized.
This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.