3.6 and 4.5 Micron Phase Curves and Evidence for Non-Equilibrium Chemistry in the Atmosphere of Extrasolar Planet HD 189733b
Heather A. Knutson, Nikole Lewis, Jonathan J. Fortney, Adam Burrows,, Adam P. Showman, Nicolas B. Cowan, Eric Agol, Suzanne Aigrain, David, Charbonneau, Drake Deming, Jean-Michel Desert, Gregory W. Henry, Jonathan, Langton, and Gregory Laughlin

TL;DR
This study presents new infrared phase curve observations of exoplanet HD 189733b, revealing non-equilibrium chemistry and atmospheric dynamics, with improved measurement accuracy and evidence for vertical mixing affecting atmospheric composition.
Contribution
The paper provides the first comprehensive phase curve analysis at 3.6 and 4.5 microns, demonstrating non-equilibrium chemistry and atmospheric circulation effects in HD 189733b.
Findings
Phase curve amplitudes measured at 3.6 and 4.5 microns.
Flux minima occur earlier than equilibrium models predict.
Discrepancy in 4.5 micron nightside flux suggests vertical mixing.
Abstract
We present new, full-orbit observations of the infrared phase variations of the canonical hot Jupiter HD 189733b obtained in the 3.6 and 4.5 micron bands using the Spitzer Space Telescope. When combined with previous phase curve observations at 8.0 and 24 micron, these data allow us to characterize the exoplanet's emission spectrum as a function of planetary longitude. We utilize improved methods for removing the effects of intrapixel sensitivity variations and accounting for the presence of time-correlated noise in our data. We measure a phase curve amplitude of 0.1242% +/- 0.0061% in the 3.6 micron band and 0.0982% +/- 0.0089% in the 4.5 micron band. We find that the times of minimum and maximum flux occur several hours earlier than predicted for an atmosphere in radiative equilibrium, consistent with the eastward advection of gas by an equatorial super-rotating jet. The locations of…
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