Thermal Phase Variations of WASP-12b: Defying Predictions
N. B. Cowan (Northwestern), P. Machalek (SETI), B. Croll (MIT), L. M., Shekhtman (Northwestern), A. Burrows (Princeton), D. Deming (UMD), T. Greene, (NASA Ames), J. L. Hora (CfA)

TL;DR
This study presents detailed infrared phase observations of WASP-12b revealing unexpected thermal variations, atmospheric opacity differences, and potential ellipsoidal effects, challenging existing models of hot Jupiter atmospheres.
Contribution
It provides the first full-orbit phase measurements at 3.6 and 4.5 microns, highlighting discrepancies with predictions and proposing new interpretations of observed variations.
Findings
Large amplitude phase variations suggest poor heat redistribution.
Transit depths indicate higher opacity at 3.6 micron than at 4.5 micron.
Detected 4.5 micron ellipsoidal variations are stronger than models predict.
Abstract
[Abridged] We report Warm Spitzer full-orbit phase observations of WASP-12b at 3.6 and 4.5 micron. We are able to measure the transit depths, eclipse depths, thermal and ellipsoidal phase variations at both wavelengths. The large amplitude phase variations, combined with the planet's previously-measured day-side spectral energy distribution, is indicative of non-zero Bond albedo and very poor day-night heat redistribution. The transit depths in the mid-infrared indicate that the atmospheric opacity is greater at 3.6 than at 4.5 micron, in disagreement with model predictions, irrespective of C/O ratio. The secondary eclipse depths are consistent with previous studies. We do not detect ellipsoidal variations at 3.6 micron, but our parameter uncertainties -estimated via prayer-bead Monte Carlo- keep this non-detection consistent with model predictions. At 4.5 micron, on the other hand, we…
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