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The Hubble PanCET program: Transit and Eclipse Spectroscopy of the Strongly Irradiated Giant Exoplanet WASP-76b

Authors :
Fu, Guangwei
Deming, Drake
Lothringer, Joshua
Nikolov, Nikolay
Sing, David K.
Kempton, Eliza M. -R.
Ih, Jegug
Evans, Thomas M.
Stevenson, Kevin
Wakeford, H. R.
Rodriguez, Joseph E.
Eastman, Jason D.
Stassun, Keivan
Henry, Gregory W.
López-Morales, Mercedes
Lendl, Monika
Conti, Dennis M.
Stockdale, Chris
Collins, Karen
Kielkopf, John
Barstow, Joanna K.
Sanz-Forcada, Jorge
Ehrenreich, David
Bourrier, Vincent
Source :
2021 AJ 162 108
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Ultra-hot Jupiters with equilibrium temperature greater than 2000K are uniquely interesting targets as they provide us crucial insights into how atmospheres behave under extreme conditions. This class of giant planets receives intense radiation from their host star and usually has strongly irradiated and highly inflated atmospheres. At such high temperature, cloud formation is expected to be suppressed and thermal dissociation of water vapor could occur. We observed the ultra-hot Jupiter WASP-76b with 7 transits and 5 eclipses using the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) and $Spitzer$ for a comprehensive study of its atmospheric chemical and physical processes. We detect TiO and H$_2$O absorption in the optical and near-infrared transit spectrum. Additional absorption by a number of neutral and ionized heavy metals like Fe, Ni, Ti, and SiO help explain the short wavelength transit spectrum. The secondary eclipse spectrum shows muted water feature but a strong CO emission feature in Spitzer's 4.5 $\mu$m band indicating an inverted temperature pressure profile. We analyzed both the transit and emission spectrum with a combination of self-consistent PHOENIX models and retrieval models (ATMO $\&$ PLATON). Both spectra are well fitted by the self-consistent PHOENIX forward atmosphere model in chemical and radiative equilibrium at solar metallicity, adding to the growing evidence that both TiO/VO and NUV heavy metals opacity are prominent NUV-optical opacity sources in the stratospheres of ultra-hot Jupiters.<br />Comment: 28 pages, 18 figures, 9 tables, accepted by AJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
2021 AJ 162 108
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2005.02568
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ac1200