Another look at the dayside spectra of WASP-43b and HD 209458b: are there scattering clouds?

ArXiv 2307.08148 (2023)

Authors:

Jake Taylor, Vivien Parmentier

A simple method to estimate radial velocity variations due to stellar activity using photometry (vol 419, pg 3147, 2012)

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY 91̽»¨ University Press (OUP) 524:1 (2023) 906-906

The Hazy and Metal-rich Atmosphere of GJ 1214 b Constrained by Near- and Mid-infrared Transmission Spectroscopy

The Astrophysical Journal American Astronomical Society 951:2 (2023) 96

Authors:

Peter Gao, Anjali AA Piette, Maria E Steinrueck, Matthew C Nixon, Michael Zhang, Eliza M-R Kempton, Jacob L Bean, Emily Rauscher, Vivien Parmentier, Natasha E Batalha, Arjun B Savel, Anastasia Triantafillides, Michael T Roman, Isaac Malsky, Jake Taylor

Abstract:

The near-infrared transmission spectrum of the warm sub-Neptune exoplanet GJ 1214 b has been observed to be flat and featureless, implying a high metallicity atmosphere with abundant aerosols. Recent JWST MIRI Low Resolution Spectrometer observations of a phase curve of GJ 1214 b showed that its transmission spectrum is flat out into the mid-infrared. In this paper, we use the combined near- and mid-infrared transmission spectrum of GJ 1214 b to constrain its atmospheric composition and aerosol properties. We generate a grid of photochemical haze models using an aerosol microphysics code for a number of background atmospheres spanning metallicities from 100 to 1000× solar, as well as a steam atmosphere scenario. The flatness of the combined data set largely rules out atmospheric metallicities ≤300× solar due to their large corresponding molecular feature amplitudes, preferring values ≥1000× solar and column haze production rates ≥10−10 g cm−2 s−1. The steam atmosphere scenario with similarly high haze production rates also exhibits sufficiently small molecular features to be consistent with the transmission spectrum. These compositions imply that atmospheric mean molecular weights ≥15 g mol−1 are needed to fit the data. Our results suggest that haze production is highly efficient on GJ 1214 b and could involve non-hydrocarbon, non-nitrogen haze precursors. Further characterization of GJ 1214 b’s atmosphere would likely require multiple transits and eclipses using JWST across the near- and mid-infrared, potentially complemented by ground-based high-resolution transmission spectroscopy.

Awesome SOSS: atmospheric characterization of WASP-96 b using the JWST early release observations

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91̽»¨ University Press (OUP) 524:1 (2023) 817-834

Authors:

Jake Taylor, Michael Radica, Luis Welbanks, Ryan J MacDonald, Jasmina Blecic, Maria Zamyatina, Alexander Roth, Jacob L Bean, Vivien Parmentier, Louis-Philippe Coulombe, Adina D Feinstein, Néstor Espinoza, Björn Benneke, David Lafrenière, René Doyon, Eva-Maria Ahrer

Awesome SOSS: transmission spectroscopy of WASP-96b with NIRISS/SOSS

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91̽»¨ University Press (OUP) 524:1 (2023) 835-856

Authors:

Michael Radica, Luis Welbanks, Néstor Espinoza, Jake Taylor, Louis-Philippe Coulombe, Adina D Feinstein, Jayesh Goyal, Nicholas Scarsdale, Loïc Albert, Priyanka Baghel, Jacob L Bean, Jasmina Blecic, David Lafrenière, Ryan J MacDonald, Maria Zamyatina, Romain Allart1, Étienne Artigau, Natasha E Batalha, Neil James Cook, Nicolas B Cowan, Lisa Dang, René Doyon, Marylou Fournier-Tondreau, Doug Johnstone, Michael R Line, Sarah E Moran, Sagnick Mukherjee, Stefan Pelletier, Pierre-Alexis Roy, Geert Jan Talens, Joseph Filippazzo, Klaus Pontoppidan, Kevin Volk