The 4.5 $\mu$m full-orbit phase curve of the hot Jupiter HD 209458b
Robert T. Zellem, Nikole K. Lewis, Heather A. Knutson, Caitlin A., Griffith, Adam P. Showman, Jonathan J. Fortney, Nicolas B. Cowan, Eric Agol,, Adam Burrows, David Charbonneau, Drake Deming, Gregory Laughlin, Jonathan, Langton

TL;DR
This study presents the first full-orbit 4.5 μm phase curve of HD 209458b, revealing an eastward hot spot shift, revised emission measurements, and insights into its atmospheric circulation and temperature contrasts.
Contribution
It provides the first complete 4.5 μm phase curve of HD 209458b, refining previous measurements and confirming superrotation-induced hot spot displacement.
Findings
Hot spot shifted eastward by 40.9°
Dayside temperature ~1499 K, nightside ~972 K
Smaller day-to-night temperature contrast than more irradiated exoplanets
Abstract
The hot Jupiter HD 209458b is particularly amenable to detailed study as it is among the brightest transiting exoplanet systems currently known (V-mag = 7.65; K-mag = 6.308) and has a large planet-to-star contrast ratio. HD 209458b is predicted to be in synchronous rotation about its host star with a hot spot that is shifted eastward of the substellar point by superrotating equatorial winds. Here we present the first full-orbit observations of HD 209458b, in which its 4.5 m emission was recorded with /IRAC. Our study revises the previous 4.5 m measurement of HD 209458b's secondary eclipse emission downward by 35% to , changing our interpretation of the properties of its dayside atmosphere. We find that the hot spot on the planet's dayside is shifted eastward of the substellar point by , in agreement…
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