BOWIE-ALIGN: A JWST comparative survey of aligned versus misaligned hot Jupiters to test the dependence of atmospheric composition on migration history

RAS Techniques and Instruments 91探花 University Press 3:1 (2024) 691-704

Authors:

James Kirk, Eva-Maria Ahrer, Anna BT Penzlin, James E Owen, Richard A Booth, Lili Alderson, Duncan A Christie, Alastair B Claringbold, Emma Esparza-Borges, Chloe E Fisher, Mercedes L贸pez-Morales, NJ Mayne, Mason McCormack, Annabella Meech, Vatsal Panwar, Diana Powell, Denis E Sergeev, Jake Taylor, Shang-Min Tsai, Daniel Valentine, Hannah R Wakeford, Peter J Wheatley, Maria Zamyatina

Abstract:

A primary objective of exoplanet atmosphere characterization is to learn about planet formation and evolution, however, this is challenged by degeneracies. To determine whether differences in atmospheric composition can be reliably traced to differences in evolution, we are undertaking a transmission spectroscopy survey with JWST to compare the compositions of a sample of hot Jupiters that have different orbital alignments around F stars above the Kraft break. Under the assumption that aligned planets migrate through the inner disc, while misaligned planets migrate after disc dispersal, the act of migrating through the inner disc should cause a measurable difference in the C/O between aligned and misaligned planets. We expect the amplitude and sign of this difference to depend on the amount of planetesimal accretion and whether silicates accreted from the inner disc release their oxygen. Here, we identify all known exoplanets that are suitable for testing this hypothesis, describe our JWST survey, and use noise simulations and atmospheric retrievals to estimate our survey鈥檚 sensitivity. With the selected sample of four aligned and four misaligned hot Jupiters, we will be sensitive to the predicted differences in C/O between aligned and misaligned hot Jupiters for a wide range of model scenarios.

JWST/NIRISS Reveals the Water-rich 鈥淪team World鈥 Atmosphere of GJ 9827 d

The Astrophysical Journal Letters American Astronomical Society 974:1 (2024) L10

Authors:

Caroline Piaulet-Ghorayeb, Bj枚rn Benneke, Michael Radica, Eshan Raul, Louis-Philippe Coulombe, Eva-Maria Ahrer, Daria Kubyshkina, Ward S Howard, Joshua Krissansen-Totton, Ryan J MacDonald, Pierre-Alexis Roy, Amy Louca, Duncan Christie, Marylou Fournier-Tondreau, Romain Allart, Yamila Miguel, Hilke E Schlichting, Luis Welbanks, Charles Cadieux, Caroline Dorn, Thomas M Evans-Soma, Jonathan J Fortney, Raymond Pierrehumbert, David Lafreni猫re

Abstract:

With sizable volatile envelopes but smaller radii than the solar system ice giants, sub-Neptunes have been revealed as one of the most common types of planet in the galaxy. While the spectroscopic characterization of larger sub-Neptunes (2.5鈥4 R 鈯) has revealed hydrogen-dominated atmospheres, smaller sub-Neptunes (1.6鈥2.5 R 鈯) could either host thin, rapidly evaporating, hydrogen-rich atmospheres or be stable, metal-rich 鈥渨ater worlds鈥 with high mean molecular weight atmospheres and a fundamentally different formation and evolutionary history. Here, we present the 0.6鈥2.8 渭m JWST/NIRISS/SOSS transmission spectrum of GJ 9827 d, the smallest (1.98 R 鈯) warm (T eq,A=0.3 鈭 620 K) sub-Neptune where atmospheric absorbers have been detected to date. Our two transit observations with NIRISS/SOSS, combined with the existing HST/WFC3 spectrum, enable us to break the clouds鈥搈etallicity degeneracy. We detect water in a highly metal-enriched 鈥渟team world鈥 atmosphere (O/H of 鈭4 by mass and H2O found to be the background gas with a volume mixing ratio of >31%). We further show that these results are robust to stellar contamination through the transit light source effect. We do not detect escaping metastable He, which, combined with previous nondetections of escaping He and H, 91探花s the steam atmosphere scenario. In water-rich atmospheres, hydrogen loss driven by water photolysis happens predominantly in the ionized form, which eludes observational constraints. We also detect several flares in the NIRISS/SOSS light curves with far-UV energies of the order of 1030 erg, highlighting the active nature of the star. Further atmospheric characterization of GJ 9827 d probing carbon or sulfur species could reveal the origin of its high metal enrichment.

The only inflated brown dwarf in an eclipsing white dwarf鈥揵rown dwarf binary: WD1032+011B

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91探花 University Press (OUP) 534:3 (2024) 2244-2262

Authors:

Jenni R French, Sarah L Casewell, Rachael C Amaro, Joshua D Lothringer, LC Mayorga, Stuart P Littlefair, Ben WP Lew, Yifan Zhou, Daniel Apai, Mark S Marley, Vivien Parmentier, Xianyu Tan

Possible Carbon Dioxide above the Thick Aerosols of GJ 1214 b

The Astrophysical Journal Letters American Astronomical Society 974:2 (2024) l33

Authors:

Everett Schlawin, Kazumasa Ohno, Taylor J Bell, Matthew M Murphy, Luis Welbanks, Thomas G Beatty, Thomas P Greene, Jonathan J Fortney, Vivien Parmentier, Isaac R Edelman, Samuel Gill, David R Anderson, Peter J Wheatley, Gregory W Henry, Nishil Mehta, Laura Kreidberg, Marcia J Rieke

JWST/NIRISS and HST: exploring the improved ability to characterise exoplanet atmospheres in the JWST era

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91探花 University Press 535:1 (2024) 27-46

Authors:

Chloe Fisher, Jake Taylor, Vivien Parmentier, Daniel Kitzmann, Jayne Birkby, Michael Radica, Joanna Barstow, Jingxuan Yang, Giuseppe Morello

Abstract:

The Hubble Space Telescope has been a pioneering instrument for studying the atmospheres of exoplanets, specifically its WFC3 and STIS instruments. With the launch of JWST, we are able to observe larger spectral ranges at higher precision. NIRISS/SOSS covers the range 0.6鈥2.8 microns, and thus, it can serve as a direct comparison to WFC3 (0.8鈥1.7 microns). We perform atmospheric retrievals of WFC3 and NIRISS transmission spectra of WASP-39 b in order to compare their constraining power. We find that NIRISS is able to retrieve precise H2O abundances that do not suffer a degeneracy with the continuum level due to the coverage of multiple spectral features. We also combine these data sets with spectra from STIS and find that challenges associated with fitting the steep optical slope can bias the retrieval results. In an effort to diagnose the differences between the WFC3 and NIRISS retrievals, we perform the analysis again on the NIRISS data cut to the same wavelength range as WFC3. We find that the water abundance is in strong disagreement with both the WFC3 and full NIRISS retrievals, highlighting the importance of wide wavelength coverage. Finally, we carry out mock retrievals on the different instruments, which shows further evidence of the challenges in constraining water abundance from the WFC3 data alone. Our study demonstrates the vast information gain of JWST鈥檚 NIRISS instrument over WFC3, highlighting the insights to be obtained from our new era of space-based instruments.