A Library of Self-Consistent Simulated Exoplanet Atmospheres
Goyal, JM; Mayne, N; Drummond, B; et al.Sing, DK; Hebrard, E; Lewis, N; Tremblin, P; Phillips, MW; Mikal-Evans, T; Wakeford, HR
Date: 13 August 2020
Journal
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP) / Royal Astronomical Society
Publisher DOI
Abstract
We present a publicly available library of model atmospheres with radiativeconvective equilibrium Pressure-Temperature (P-T) profiles fully consistent with equilibrium chemical abundances, and the corresponding emission and transmission spectrum with R∼5000 at 0.2 µm decreasing to R∼35 at 30 µm, for 89 hot Jupiter exoplanets, for four ...
We present a publicly available library of model atmospheres with radiativeconvective equilibrium Pressure-Temperature (P-T) profiles fully consistent with equilibrium chemical abundances, and the corresponding emission and transmission spectrum with R∼5000 at 0.2 µm decreasing to R∼35 at 30 µm, for 89 hot Jupiter exoplanets, for four re-circulation factors, six metallicities and six C/O ratios. We find
the choice of condensation process (local/rainout) alters the P-T profile and thereby
the spectrum substantially, potentially detectable by JWST. We find H− opacity can
contribute to form a strong temperature inversion in ultra-hot Jupiters for C/O ratios
≥ 1 and can make transmission spectra features flat in the optical, alongside altering
the entire emission spectra. We highlight how adopting different model choices such
as thermal ionisation, opacities, line-wing profiles and the methodology of varying the
C/O ratio, effects the P-T structure and the spectrum. We show the role of Fe opacity to form primary/secondary inversion in the atmosphere. We use WASP-17b and
WASP-121b as test cases to demonstrate the effect of grid parameters across their full
range, while highlighting some important findings, concerning the overall atmospheric
structure, chemical transition regimes and their observables. Finally, we apply this
library to the current transmission and emission spectra observations of WASP-121b,
which shows H2O and tentative evidence for VO at the limb, and H2O emission feature indicative of inversion on the dayside, with very low energy redistribution, thereby
demonstrating the applicability of library for planning and interpreting observations
of transmission and emission spectrum
Physics and Astronomy
Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy
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