Elemental abundances and minimum mass of heavy elements in the envelope of HD 189733b
Olivier Mousis, Jonathan I. Lunine, Giovanna Tinetti, Caitlin A., Griffith, Adam P. Showman, Yann Alibert, Jean-Philippe Beaulieu

TL;DR
This study investigates the apparent contradiction between the low atmospheric volatile abundances and the high heavy element content in HD 189733b, proposing that stellar irradiation causes element settling, affecting observed compositions.
Contribution
It models the formation and composition of ices accreted by HD 189733b, explaining the discrepancy through irradiation-induced element settling in the atmosphere.
Findings
Predicted volatile abundances are 0.15-0.3 times solar.
Heavy element mass suggests 1.2-2.4 times oversolar abundances.
Irradiation likely causes gravitational settling of elements.
Abstract
Oxygen (O) and carbon (C) have been inferred recently to be subsolar in abundance from spectra of the atmosphere of the transiting hot Jupiter HD 189733b. Yet, the mass and radius of the planet coupled with structure models indicate a strongly supersolar abundance of heavy elements in the interior of this object. Here we explore the discrepancy between the large amount of heavy elements suspected in the planet's interior and the paucity of volatiles measured in its atmosphere. We describe the formation sequence of the icy planetesimals formed beyond the snow line of the protoplanetary disk and calculate the composition of ices ultimately accreted in the envelope of HD 189733b on its migration pathway. This allows us to reproduce the observed volatile abundances by adjusting the mass of ices vaporized in the envelope. The predicted elemental mixing ratios should be 0.15--0.3 times solar…
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