Molecular Detectability in Exoplanetary Emission Spectra
Tessenyi Marcell, Tinetti Giovanna, Savini Giorgio, Pascale Enzo

TL;DR
This study evaluates the detectability of key atmospheric molecules in various exoplanet types using transit spectroscopy, demonstrating that even low SNR and spectral resolution can suffice for molecular detection.
Contribution
It provides a systematic analysis of molecular detectability across different exoplanet types and identifies the minimum SNR and resolution needed for reliable detection of key molecules.
Findings
SNR=5 at R=300 or R=30 can detect strong features in most cases.
SNR between 10 and 20 can detect molecules with abundances as low as 10^-6.
Results are robust against variations in thermal profile and atmospheric composition.
Abstract
Of the many recently discovered worlds orbiting distant stars, very little is yet known of their chemical composition. With the arrival of new transit spectroscopy and direct imaging facilities, the question of molecular detectability as a function of signal-to-noise (SNR), spectral resolving power and type of planets has become critical. In this paper, we study the detectability of key molecules in the atmospheres of a range of planet types, and report on the minimum detectable abundances at fixed spectral resolving power and SNR. The planet types considered - hot Jupiters, hot super-Earths, warm Neptunes, temperate Jupiters and temperate super-Earths - cover most of the exoplanets characterisable today or in the near future. We focus on key atmospheric molecules, such as CH4, CO, CO2, NH3, H2O, C2H2, C2H6, HCN, H2S and PH3. We use two methods to assess the detectability of these…
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