An HST Optical to Near-IR Transmission Spectrum of the Hot Jupiter WASP-19b: Detection of Atmospheric Water and Likely Absence of TiO
C. M. Huitson, D. K. Sing, F. Pont, J. J. Fortney, A. S. Burrows, P., A. Wilson, G. E. Ballester, N. Nikolov, N. P. Gibson, D. Deming, S. Aigrain,, T. M. Evans, G. W. Henry, A. Lecavelier des Etangs, A. P. Showman, A., Vidal-Madjar, K. Zahnle

TL;DR
This study presents the transmission spectrum of the hot Jupiter WASP-19b, revealing water absorption and likely absence of TiO, using combined optical and near-infrared data from HST, while accounting for stellar activity effects.
Contribution
First combined optical and near-IR transmission spectrum of WASP-19b, detecting water and constraining atmospheric composition, especially ruling out TiO presence at high confidence.
Findings
Water detected at 4 sigma confidence in the near-IR spectrum.
TiO features are absent at 2.7-2.9 sigma confidence, indicating low or no TiO.
Stellar activity effects were corrected, enabling accurate atmospheric characterization.
Abstract
We measure the transmission spectrum of WASP-19b from 3 transits using low-resolution optical spectroscopy from the HST Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS). The STIS spectra cover a wavelength range of 0.29-1.03 microns with resolving power R=500. The optical data are combined with archival near-IR data from the HST Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) G141 grism, covering the wavelength range 1.087-1.687 micron, with resolving power R=130. We obtain the transmission spectrum from 0.53-1.687 microns with S/N levels between 3000 and 11,000 in 0.1 micron bins. WASP-19 is a very active star, with optical stellar flux varying by a few per cent over time. We correct the transit light curves for the effects of stellar activity using ground-based activity monitoring with the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory (CTIO). While we were not able to construct a transmission spectrum using the blue…
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