Thermometric Soots on Warm Jupiters?
K. Zahnle, M. S. Marley, J. J. Fortney

TL;DR
This study models the disequilibrium stratospheric chemistry of warm and hot Jupiters, revealing how temperature, mixing, and composition influence organic molecule formation and haze production, with implications for interpreting planetary atmospheres.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed predictions of disequilibrium chemistry and haze formation in warm Jupiters using a comprehensive thermochemical and photochemical model.
Findings
Methane oxidation to CO and CO2 at 1200 K by thermal processes.
Enhanced organic molecules like ethylene, acetylene, and HCN at lower temperatures.
Organic haze formation explains peculiar properties of HD 189733b.
Abstract
We use a 1D thermochemical and photochemical kinetics model to predict the disequilibrium stratospheric chemistries of warm and hot Jupiters (800 < T < 1200 K). Thermal chemistry and vertical mixing are generally more important than photochemistry. At 1200 K, methane is oxidized to CO and CO2 by OH radicals from thermal decomposition of water. At T < 1000 K, methane is reactive but stable enough to reach the stratosphere, while water is stable enough that OH levels are suppressed by reaction with H2. These trends raise the effective C/O ratio in the reacting gases above unity. Reduced products such as ethylene, acetylene, and hydrogen cyanide become abundant; further polymerization should lead to formation of PAHs (Poly-Aromatic Hydrocarbons) and soots. Parallel shifts are seen in the sulfur chemistry, with CS and CS2 displacing S2 and HS as the interesting disequilibrium products.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
