The Atmospheric Chemistry of GJ 1214b: Photochemistry and Clouds
Eliza Miller-Ricci Kempton (1), Kevin Zahnle (2), Jonathan J. Fortney, (1) ((1) U.C. Santa Cruz, (2) NASA Ames Research Center)

TL;DR
This study investigates the atmospheric composition of GJ 1214b, focusing on photochemistry and clouds, and finds that clouds and methane photolysis significantly influence its transmission spectrum, with minimal effects from non-equilibrium chemistry.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of photochemistry and cloud effects on GJ 1214b's atmosphere, highlighting the role of methane depletion and cloud layers in spectral observations.
Findings
Non-equilibrium chemistry has minimal impact on transmission spectrum.
Cloud layers at ~200 mbar best fit observations.
Efficient methane photolysis is necessary to explain spectral features.
Abstract
Recent observations of the transiting super-Earth GJ 1214b reveal that its atmosphere may be hydrogen-rich or water-rich in nature, with clouds or hazes potentially affecting its transmission spectrum in the optical and very-near-IR. Here we further examine the possibility that GJ 1214b does indeed possess a hydrogen-dominated atmosphere, which is the hypothesis that is favored by models of the bulk composition of the planet. We study the effects of non-equilibrium chemistry (photochemistry, thermal chemistry, and mixing) on the planet's transmission spectrum. We furthermore examine the possibility that clouds could play a significant role in attenuating GJ 1214b's transmission spectrum at short wavelengths. We find that non-equilibrium chemistry can have a large effect on the overall chemical composition of GJ 1214b's atmosphere, however these changes mostly take place above the height…
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