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91̽»¨
WASp-121b at different phases as would be seen by an observer, modelled with the 3D SPARC/MITgcm.

The hot Jupiter WASP-121b at different phases as would be seen by an observer, modelled with the 3D SPARC/MITgcm.

Credit: Vivien Parmentier

Vivien Parmentier

Visitor

Research theme

  • Astronomy and astrophysics
  • Exoplanets and planetary physics

Sub department

  • Atmospheric, Oceanic and Planetary Physics

Research groups

  • Exoplanet atmospheres
  • Exoplanets and Stellar Physics
vivien.parmentier@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865282458
Atmospheric Physics Clarendon Laboratory, room 116
  • About
  • Publications

From thermal dissociation to condensation in the atmospheres of ultra hot Jupiters: WASP-121b in context

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS 617 (2018) ARTN A110

Authors:

Vivien Parmentier, Mike R Line, Jacob L Bean, Megan Mansfield, Laura Kreidberg, Roxana Lupu, Channon Visscher, Jean-Michel Desert, Jonathan J Fortney, Magalie Deleuil, Jacob Arcangeli, Adam P Showman, Mark S Marley

Abstract:

Context. A new class of exoplanets has emerged: the ultra hot Jupiters, the hottest close-in gas giants. The majority of them have weaker-than-expected spectral features in the 1.1−1.7 µm bandpass probed by HST/WFC3 but stronger spectral features at longer wavelengths probed by Spitzer. This led previous authors to puzzling conclusions about the thermal structures and chemical abundances of these planets. Aims. We investigate how thermal dissociation, ionization, H − opacity, and clouds shape the thermal structures and spectral properties of ultra hot Jupiters. Methods. We use the SPARC/MITgcm to model the atmospheres of four ultra hot Jupiters and discuss more thoroughly the case of WASP-121b. We expand our findings to the whole population of ultra hot Jupiters through analytical quantification of the thermal dissociation and its influence on the strength of spectral features. Results. We predict that most molecules are thermally dissociated and alkalies are ionized in the dayside photospheres of ultra hot Jupiters. This includes H2O, TiO, VO, and H2 but not CO, which has a stronger molecular bond. The vertical molecular gradient created by the dissociation significantly weakens the spectral features from H2O while the 4.5 µm CO feature remains unchanged. The water band in the HST/WFC3 bandpass is further weakened by the continuous opacity of the H − ions. Molecules are expected to recombine before reaching the limb, leading to order of magnitude variations of the chemical composition and cloud coverage between the limb and the dayside. Conclusions. Molecular dissociation provides a qualitative understanding of the lack of strong spectral features of water in the 1−2 µm bandpass observed in most ultra hot Jupiters. Quantitatively, our model does not provide a satisfactory match to the WASP-121b emission spectrum. Together with WASP-33b and Kepler-33Ab, they seem the outliers among the population of ultra hot Jupiters, in need of a more thorough understanding

Exoplanet phase curves: observations and theory

ArXiv 1711.07696 (2017)

Authors:

Vivien Parmentier, Ian Crossfield

Abstract:

Phase curves are the best technique to probe the three dimensional structure of exoplanets' atmospheres. In this chapter we first review current exoplanets phase curve observations and the particular challenges they face. We then describe the different physical mechanisms shaping the atmospheric phase curves of highly irradiated tidally locked exoplanets. Finally, we discuss the potential for future missions to further advance our understanding of these new worlds.

The cloudy shape of hot Jupiter thermal phase curves

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY 501:1 (2021) 78-108

Authors:

Vivien Parmentier, Adam P Showman, Jonathan J Fortney

Understanding and mitigating biases when studying inhomogeneous emission spectra with JWST

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Royal Astronomical Society 493:3 (2020) 4342-4354,

Authors:

Jake Taylor, Vivien Parmentier, Patrick Irwin, Suzanne Aigrain, Graham Lee, Joshua Krissansen-Totton

Abstract:

Exoplanet emission spectra are often modelled assuming that the hemisphere observed is well represented by a horizontally homogenized atmosphere. However, this approximation will likely fail for planets with a large temperature contrast in the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) era, potentially leading to erroneous interpretations of spectra. We first develop an analytic formulation to quantify the signal-to-noise ratio and wavelength coverage necessary to disentangle temperature inhomogeneities from a hemispherically averaged spectrum. We find that for a given signal-to-noise ratio, observations at shorter wavelengths are better at detecting the presence of inhomogeneities. We then determine why the presence of an inhomogeneous thermal structure can lead to spurious molecular detections when assuming a fully homogenized planet in the retrieval process. Finally, we quantify more precisely the potential biases by modelling a suite of hot Jupiter spectra, varying the spatial contributions of a hot and a cold region, as would be observed by the different instruments of JWST/NIRSpec. We then retrieve the abundances and temperature profiles from the synthetic observations. We find that in most cases, assuming a homogeneous thermal structure when retrieving the atmospheric chemistry leads to biased results, and spurious molecular detection. Explicitly modelling the data using two profiles avoids these biases, and is statistically 91̽»¨ed provided the wavelength coverage is wide enough, and crucially also spanning shorter wavelengths. For the high contrast used here, a single profile with a dilution factor performs as well as the two-profile case, with only one additional parameter compared to the 1D approach.

A Stellar magnesium to silicon ratio in the atmosphere of an exoplanet.

Nature communications (2026)

Authors:

Jorge A Sanchez, Peter CB Smith, Krishna Kanumalla, Luis Welbanks, Michael R Line, Stefan Pelletier, Steven Desch, Patrick Young, Jennifer Patience, Jacob Bean, Matteo Brogi, Dan Jaffe, Gregory N Mace, Megan Weiner Mansfield, Vatsal Panwar, Vivien Parmentier, Lorenzo Pino, Arjun Baliga Savel, Lennart van Sluijs, Joost P Wardenier

Abstract:

The elemental compositions of exoplanets encode information about their formation environments and internal structures. While volatile ratios such as carbon-to-oxygen (C/O) are used to trace formation location, the rock-forming elements-magnesium (Mg), silicon (Si), and iron (Fe)-govern interior mineralogy and are commonly assumed to reflect the host star's abundances. Yet this assumption remains largely untested. Ultra-hot Jupiters, gas-giant exoplanets with dayside temperatures above 3000 K, provide rare access to refractory elements that remain gaseous. Here we present high-resolution thermal emission spectroscopy of the exoplanet WASP-189b (Teq=3354-34+27 K) obtained with the Immersion Grating Infrared Spectrometer (IGRINS) on Gemini South. We detect neutral iron (Fe I), magnesium (Mg I), silicon (Si I), water (H2O), carbon monoxide (CO), and hydroxyl (OH) at signal-to-noise ratios exceeding 4, and retrieve their elemental abundances. We show that the Mg/Si, Fe/Mg, and Si/Fe ratios are consistent with stellar values, while the refractory-to-volatile ratio is enhanced by roughly a factor of 2. These findings demonstrate that giant-planet atmospheres can preserve stellar-like rock-forming ratios, providing an empirical validation of the stellar-proxy assumption that underpins planetary composition and formation models across exoplanet systems.

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