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A Spectroscopic Thermometer: Individual Vibrational Band Spectroscopy with the Example of OH in the Atmosphere of WASP-33b

Authors :
Sam O. M. Wright
Stevanus K. Nugroho
Matteo Brogi
Neale P. Gibson
Ernst J. W. de Mooij
Ingo Waldmann
Jonathan Tennyson
Hajime Kawahara
Masayuki Kuzuhara
Teruyuki Hirano
Takayuki Kotani
Yui Kawashima
Kento Masuda
Jayne L. Birkby
Chris A. Watson
Motohide Tamura
Konstanze Zwintz
Hiroki Harakawa
Tomoyuki Kudo
Klaus Hodapp
Shane Jacobson
Mihoko Konishi
Takashi Kurokawa
Jun Nishikawa
Masashi Omiya
Takuma Serizawa
Akitoshi Ueda
Sébastien Vievard
Sergei N. Yurchenko
Source :
The Astronomical Journal, Vol 166, Iss 2, p 41 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
IOP Publishing, 2023.

Abstract

Individual vibrational band spectroscopy presents an opportunity to examine exoplanet atmospheres in detail, by distinguishing where the vibrational state populations of molecules differ from the current assumption of a Boltzmann distribution. Here, retrieving vibrational bands of OH in exoplanet atmospheres is explored using the hot Jupiter WASP-33b as an example. We simulate low-resolution spectroscopic data for observations with the JWST's NIRSpec instrument and use high-resolution observational data obtained from the Subaru InfraRed Doppler instrument (IRD). Vibrational band–specific OH cross-section sets are constructed and used in retrievals on the (simulated) low- and (real) high-resolution data. Low-resolution observations are simulated for two WASP-33b emission scenarios: under the assumption of local thermal equilibrium (LTE) and with a toy non-LTE model for vibrational excitation of selected bands. We show that mixing ratios for individual bands can be retrieved with sufficient precision to allow the vibrational population distributions of the forward models to be reconstructed. A fit for the Boltzmann distribution in the LTE case shows that the vibrational temperature is recoverable in this manner. For high-resolution, cross-correlation applications, we apply the individual vibrational band analysis to an IRD spectrum of WASP-33b, applying an “unpeeling” technique. Individual detection significances for the two strongest bands are shown to be in line with Boltzmann-distributed vibrational state populations, consistent with the effective temperature of the WASP-33b atmosphere reported previously. We show the viability of this approach for analyzing the individual vibrational state populations behind observed and simulated spectra, including reconstructing state population distributions.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15383881
Volume :
166
Issue :
2
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
The Astronomical Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.bee9f33443ea4f24b773a0ac03e15a1e
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/acdb75