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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

The Dark World: A Tale of WASP-43b in Reflected Light with HST WFC3/UVIS

The Astronomical Journal American Astronomical Society 161:6 (2021) 269

Authors:

Jonathan Fraine, LC Mayorga, Kevin B Stevenson, Nikole K Lewis, Tiffany Kataria, Jacob L Bean, Giovanni Bruno, Jonathan J Fortney, Laura Kreidberg, Caroline V Morley, Nelly C Mouawad, Kamen O Todorov, Vivien Parmentier, Hannah Wakeford, Y Katherina Feng, Brian M Kilpatrick, Michael R Line

A comprehensive reanalysis of Spitzer鈥檚 4.5 渭m phase curves, and the phase variations of the ultra-hot Jupiters MASCARA-1b and KELT-16b

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91探花 University Press (OUP) 504:3 (2021) 3316-3337

Authors:

Taylor J Bell, Lisa Dang, Nicolas B Cowan, Jacob Bean, Jean-Michel D茅sert, Jonathan J Fortney, Dylan Keating, Eliza Kempton, Laura Kreidberg, Michael R Line, Megan Mansfield, Vivien Parmentier, Kevin B Stevenson, Mark Swain, Robert T Zellem

Cloud property trends in hot and ultra-hot giant gas planets (WASP-43b, WASP-103b, WASP-121b, HAT-P-7b, and WASP-18b)

Astronomy & Astrophysics EDP Sciences 649 (2021) a44

Authors:

Ch Helling, D Lewis, D Samra, L Carone, V Graham, O Herbort, KL Chubb, M Min, R Waters, V Parmentier, N Mayne

Evidence for disequilibrium chemistry from vertical mixing in hot Jupiter atmospheres: a comprehensive survey of transiting close-in gas giant exoplanets with warm-Spitzer/IRAC

Astronomy and Astrophysics EDP Sciences 648 (2021) A127

Authors:

Claire Baxter, Jean-Michel Desert, Shang-Min Tsai, Kamen O Todorov, Jacob L Bean, Drake Deming, Vivien Parmentier, Jonathan J Fortney, Michael Line, Daniel Thorngren, Raymond T Pierrehumbert, Adam Burrows, Adam P Showman

Abstract:

Aims: We present a large atmospheric study of 49 gas giant exoplanets using infrared transmission photometry with Spitzer/IRAC at 3.6 and 4.5 μm. Methods. We uniformly analyze 70 photometric light curves of 33 transiting planets using our custom pipeline, which implements pixel level decorrelation. Augmenting our sample with 16 previously published exoplanets leads to a total of 49. We use this survey to understand how infrared photometry traces changes in atmospheric chemical properties as a function of planetary temperature. We compare our measurements to a grid of 1D radiative-convective equilibrium forward atmospheric models which include disequilibrium chemistry. We explore various strengths of vertical mixing (Kzz = 0-1012 cm2 s-1) as well as two chemical compositions (1x and 30x solar).

Results: We find that, on average, Spitzer probes a difference of 0.5 atmospheric scale heights between 3.6 and 4.5 μm, which is measured at 7.5σ level of significance. Changes in the opacities in the two Spitzer bandpasses are expected with increasing temperature due to the transition from methane-dominated to carbon-monoxide-dominated atmospheres at chemical equilibrium. Comparing the data with our model grids, we find that the coolest planets show a lack of methane compared to expectations, which has also been reported by previous studies of individual objects. We show that the sample of coolest planets rule out 1x solar composition with >3σ confidence while 91探花ing low vertical mixing (Kzz = 108 cm2 s-1). On the other hand, we find that the hot planets are best explained by models with 1x solar metallicity and high vertical mixing (Kzz = 1012 cm2 s-1). We interpret this as the lofting of CH4 to the upper atmospheric layers. Changing the interior temperature changes the expectation for equilibrium chemistry in deep layers, hence the expectation of disequilibrium chemistry higher up. We also find a significant scatter in the transmission signatures of the mid-Temperate and ultra-hot planets, likely due to increased atmospheric diversity, without the need to invoke higher metallicities. Additionally, we compare Spitzer transmission with emission in the same bandpasses for the same planets and find no evidence for any correlation. Although more advanced modelling would test our conclusions further, our simple generic model grid points towards different amounts of vertical mixing occurring across the temperature range of hot Jupiters. This finding also agrees with the observed scatter with increasing planetary magnitude seen in Spitzer/IRAC color-magnitude diagrams for planets and brown dwarfs.

Water Ice Cloud Variability and Multi-epoch Transmission Spectra of TRAPPIST-1e

The Astrophysical Journal Letters American Astronomical Society 911:2 (2021) l30

Authors:

EM May, J Taylor, TD Komacek, MR Line, V Parmentier

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