A weak spectral signature of water vapour in the atmosphere of HD 179949 b at high spectral resolution in the L band

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91探花 University Press 494:1 (2020) 108-119

Authors:

Rebecca K Webb, Matteo Brogi, Siddharth Gandhi, Michael R Line, Jayne L Birkby, Katy L Chubb, Ignas AG Snellen, Sergey N Yurchenko

Abstract:

High-resolution spectroscopy (鈦燫猢20000鈦) is currently the only known method to constrain the orbital solution and atmospheric properties of non-transiting hot Jupiters. It does so by resolving the spectral features of the planet into a forest of spectral lines and directly observing its Doppler shift while orbiting the host star. In this study, we analyse VLT/CRIRES (鈦燫=100000鈦) L-band observations of the non-transiting giant planet HD 179949 b centred around 3.5鈥壩糾鈦. We observe a weak (3.0蟽, or S/N鈥=鈥4.8) spectral signature of H2O in absorption contained within the radial velocity of the planet at superior-conjunction, with a mild dependence on the choice of line list used for the modelling. Combining this data with previous observations in the K band, we measure a detection significance of 8.4鈥壪 for an atmosphere that is most consistent with a shallow lapse-rate, solar C/O ratio, and with CO and H2O being the only major sources of opacity in this wavelength range. As the two sets of data were taken 3 yr apart, this points to the absence of strong radial-velocity anomalies due, e.g. to variability in atmospheric circulation. We measure a projected orbital velocity for the planet of KP = (145.2 卤 2.0) km鈥塻鈭1 (1蟽) and improve the error bars on this parameter by 鈭70 per cent. However, we only marginally tighten constraints on orbital inclination (鈦66.2+3.7鈭3.1 deg) and planet mass (鈦0.963+0.036鈭0.031 Jupiter masses), due to the dominant uncertainties of stellar mass and semimajor axis. Follow ups of radial-velocity planets are thus crucial to fully enable their accurate characterization via high-resolution spectroscopy.

A weak spectral signature of water vapour in the atmosphere of HD 179949 b at high spectral resolution in the L-band

(2020)

Authors:

Rebecca K Webb, Matteo Brogi, Siddharth Gandhi, Michael R Line, Jayne L Birkby, Katy L Chubb, Ignas AG Snellen, Sergey N Yurchenko

Non鈥揳diabatic tidal oscillations induced by a planetary companion

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91探花 University Press (OUP) (2019)

Authors:

Andrew Bunting, John CB Papaloizou, Caroline Terquem

Abstract:

Abstract We calculate the dynamical tides raised by a close planetary companion on non鈥搑otating stars of 1聽M鈯 and 1.4聽M鈯. Using the Henyey method, we solve the fully non鈥揳diabatic equations throughout the star. The horizontal Lagrangian displacement is found to be 10 to 100聽times larger than the equilibrium tide value in a thin region near the surface of the star. This is because non鈥揳diabatic effects dominate in a region that extends from below the outer edge of the convection zone up to the stellar surface, and the equilibrium tide approximation is inconsistent with non鈥揳diabaticity. Although this approximation generally applies in the low frequency limit, it also fails in the parts of the convection zone where the forcing frequency is small but larger than the Brunt-V盲is盲l盲 frequency. We derive analytical estimates which give a good approximation to the numerical values of the magnitude of the ratio of the horizontal and radial displacements at the surface. The relative surface flux perturbation is also significant, on the order of 0.1% for a system modelled on 51 Pegasi b. Observations affected by the horizontal displacement may therefore be more achievable than previously thought, and brightness perturbations may be the result of flux perturbations rather than due to the radial displacement. We discuss the implication of this on the possibility of detecting such tidally excited oscillations, including the prospect of utilising the large horizontal motion for observations of systems such as 51 Pegasi.

Non-adiabatic tidal oscillations induced by a planetary companion

(2019)

Authors:

Andrew Bunting, John CB Papaloizou, Caroline Terquem

ESA Voyage 2050 White Paper: Detecting life outside our solar system with a large high-contrast-imaging mission

arXiv e-prints (2019) arXiv:1908.01803-arXiv:1908.01803

Authors:

Ignas Snellen, Simon Albrecht, Guillem Anglada-Escude, Isabelle Baraffe, Pierre Baudoz, Willy Benz, Jean-Luc Beuzit, Beth Biller, Jayne Birkby, Anthony Boccaletti, Roy van Boekel, Jos de Boer, Matteo Brogi, Lars Buchhave, Ludmila Carone, Mark Claire, Riccardo Claudi, Brice-Olivier Demory, Jean-Michel Desert, Silvano Desidera, Scott Gaudi, Raffaele Gratton, Michael Gillon, John Lee Grenfell, Olivier Guyon, Thomas Henning, Sasha Hinkley, Elsa Huby, Markus Janson, Christiane Helling, Kevin Heng, Markus Kasper, Christoph Keller, Matthew Kenworthy, Oliver Krause, Laura Kreidberg, Nikku Madhusudhan, Anne-Marie Lagrange, Ralf Launhardt, Tim Lenton, Manuel Lopez-Puertas, Anne-Lise Maire, Nathan Mayne, Victoria Meadows, Bertrand Mennesson, Giuseppina Micela, Yamila Miguel, Julien Milli, Michiel Min, Ernst de Mooij, David Mouillet, Mamadou N鈥橠iaye, Valentina D鈥橭razi, Enric Palle, Isabella Pagano, Giampaolo Piotto, Didier Queloz, Heike Rauer, Ignasi Ribas, Garreth Ruane, Franck Selsis, Frans Snik, Alessandro Sozzetti, Daphne Stam, Christopher Stark, Arthur Vigan, Pieter de Visser