Studying the atmosphere of the exoplanet HAT-P-7b via secondary eclipse measurements with EPOXI, Spitzer and Kepler
Jessie L. Christiansen, Sarah Ballard, David Charbonneau, N., Madhusudhan, Sara Seager, Matthew J. Holman, Dennis D. Wellnitz, Drake, Deming, Michael F. A'Hearn, the EPOXI team

TL;DR
This study combines optical and infrared secondary eclipse measurements from EPOXI, Spitzer, and Kepler to model the atmosphere of exoplanet HAT-P-7b, revealing a temperature inversion, low optical albedo, and inefficient heat redistribution.
Contribution
It provides the first combined optical and infrared atmospheric model of HAT-P-7b, confirming a temperature inversion and constraining system parameters with improved precision.
Findings
Best-fit models include a temperature inversion consistent with high incident flux.
Optical albedo is constrained to be less than 0.13.
Approximately 10% of stellar flux is redistributed to the night side.
Abstract
The highly irradiated transiting exoplanet, HAT-P-7b, currently provides one of the best opportunities for studying planetary emission in the optical and infrared wavelengths. We observe six near-consecutive secondary eclipses of HAT-P-7b at optical wavelengths with the EPOXI spacecraft. We place an upper limit on the relative eclipse depth of 0.055% (95% confidence). We also analyze Spitzer observations of the same target in the infrared, obtaining secondary eclipse depths of 0.098+/-0.017%, 0.159+/-0.022%, 0.245+/-0.031% and 0.225+/-0.052% in the 3.6, 4.5, 5.8 and 8.0 micron IRAC bands respectively. We combine these measurements with the recently published Kepler secondary eclipse measurement, and generate atmospheric models for the day-side of the planet that are consistent with both the optical and infrared measurements. The data are best fit by models with a temperature inversion,…
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