The 8 Micron Phase Variation of the Hot Saturn HD 149026b
Heather A. Knutson, David Charbonneau, Nicolas B. Cowan, Jonathan J., Fortney, Adam P. Showman, Eric Agol, and Gregory W. Henry

TL;DR
This study uses Spitzer observations to analyze the thermal emission and phase variation of the hot Saturn HD 149026b, revealing a cooler dayside than previously thought and a slight orbital eccentricity.
Contribution
First measurement of 8 micron phase variation for HD 149026b, providing new insights into its atmospheric temperature distribution and orbital parameters.
Findings
Detected a 0.0227% flux increase over half an orbit.
Derived a secondary eclipse depth of 0.0411%, indicating a cooler dayside temperature.
Found the secondary eclipse occurs slightly earlier than expected for a circular orbit.
Abstract
We monitor the star HD 149026 and its Saturn-mass planet at 8.0 micron over slightly more than half an orbit using the Infrared Array Camera (IRAC) on the Spitzer Space Telescope. We find an increase of 0.0227% +/- 0.0066% (3.4 sigma significance) in the combined planet-star flux during this interval. The minimum flux from the planet is 45% +/- 19% of the maximum planet flux, corresponding to a difference in brightness temperature of 480 +/- 140 K between the two hemispheres. We derive a new secondary eclipse depth of 0.0411% +/- 0.0076% in this band, corresponding to a dayside brightness temperature of 1440 +/- 150 K. Our new secondary eclipse depth is half that of a previous measurement (3.0 sigma difference) in this same bandpass by Harrington et al. (2007). We re-fit the Harrington et al. (2007) data and obtain a comparably good fit with a smaller eclipse depth that is consistent…
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