Optimal Estimation Retrievals of the Atmospheric Structure and Composition of HD 189733b from Secondary Eclipse Spectroscopy
Jae-Min Lee, Leigh N. Fletcher, Patrick G. J. Irwin

TL;DR
This paper applies optimal estimation techniques to retrieve the thermal structure and molecular composition of HD 189733b's atmosphere from secondary eclipse spectra, providing a comprehensive analysis of uncertainties and atmospheric features.
Contribution
First application of optimal estimation to exoplanet atmospheric retrievals, integrating radiative transfer tools and uncertainty analysis for HD 189733b.
Findings
Retrieved an isothermal upper atmosphere and a deeper adiabatic layer.
Estimated larger uncertainties on atmospheric parameters than previous studies.
Constrained potential solutions for the planet's atmospheric structure using broad wavelength spectra.
Abstract
Recent spectroscopic observations of transiting hot Jupiters have permitted the derivation of the thermal structure and molecular abundances of H2O, CO2, CO, and CH4 in these extreme atmospheres. Here, for the first time, we apply the technique of optimal estimation to determine the thermal structure and composition of an exoplanet by solving the inverse problem. The development of a suite of radiative transfer and retrieval tools for exoplanet atmospheres is described, building upon a retrieval algorithm which is extensively used in the study of our own solar system. First, we discuss the plausibility of detection of different molecules in the dayside atmosphere of HD 189733b and the best-fitting spectrum retrieved from all publicly available sets of secondary eclipse observations between 1.45 and 24 {\mu}m. Additionally, we use contribution functions to assess the vertical sensitivity…
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