The Emission Spectrum of the Hot Jupiter WASP-79b from HST/WFC3

Here we present a thermal emission spectrum of WASP-79b, obtained via Hubble Space Telescope Wide Field Camera 3 G141 observations as part of the PanCET program. As we did not observe the ingress or egress of WASP-79b's secondary eclipse, we consider two scenarios: a fixed mid-eclipse time base...

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Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2021-12
Hauptverfasser: Foote, Trevor O, Lewis, Nikole K, Kilpatrick, Brian M, Goyal, Jayesh M, Bruno, Giovanni, Wakeford, Hannah R, Robbins-Blanch, Nina, Kataria, Tiffany, MacDonald, Ryan J, López-Morales, Mercedes, Sing, David K, Mikal-Evans, Thomas, Bourrier, Vincent, Henry, Gregory, Buchhave, Lars A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Here we present a thermal emission spectrum of WASP-79b, obtained via Hubble Space Telescope Wide Field Camera 3 G141 observations as part of the PanCET program. As we did not observe the ingress or egress of WASP-79b's secondary eclipse, we consider two scenarios: a fixed mid-eclipse time based on the expected occurrence time, and a mid-eclipse time as a free parameter. In both scenarios, we can measure thermal emission from WASP-79b from 1.1 to 1.7 \(\mu\)m at 2.4\(\sigma\) confidence consistent with a 1900 K brightness temperature for the planet. We combine our observations with Spitzer dayside photometry (3.6 and 4.5 \(\mu\)m) and compare these observations to a grid of atmospheric forward models that span a range of metallicities, carbon-to-oxygen ratios, and recirculation factors. Given the strength of the planetary emission and the precision of our measurements, we found a wide range of forward models to be consistent with our data. The best-match equilibrium model suggests that WASP-79b's dayside has a solar metallicity and carbon-to-oxygen ratio, alongside a recirculation factor of 0.75. Models including significant H- opacity provide the best match to WASP-79b's emission spectrum near 1.58 \(\mu\)m. However, models featuring high-temperature cloud species-formed via vigorous vertical mixing and low sedimentation efficiencies-with little day-to-night energy transport also match WASP-79b's emission spectrum. Given the broad range of equilibrium chemistry, disequilibrium chemistry, and cloudy atmospheric models consistent with our observations of WASP-79b's dayside emission, further observations will be necessary to constrain WASP-79b's dayside atmospheric properties.
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.2107.14334