Titan solar occultation observations reveal transit spectra of a hazy world
Tyler D. Robinson, Luca Maltagliati, Mark S. Marley, Jonathan J., Fortney

TL;DR
This study uses Titan's solar occultation data to understand how high-altitude hazes influence transit spectra, revealing that hazes can significantly limit the atmospheric depths observed and affect spectral features.
Contribution
It demonstrates how Titan's haze impacts transit spectra, providing insights applicable to interpreting exoplanet observations with high-altitude hazes.
Findings
High-altitude hazes limit atmospheric depths probed by transit spectra.
Haze slope creates variations in transit height comparable to gas absorption features.
Titan's spectra show strong methane and weaker gas absorption features.
Abstract
High altitude clouds and hazes are integral to understanding exoplanet observations, and are proposed to explain observed featureless transit spectra. However, it is difficult to make inferences from these data because of the need to disentangle effects of gas absorption from haze extinction. Here, we turn to the quintessential hazy world -- Titan -- to clarify how high altitude hazes influence transit spectra. We use solar occultation observations of Titan's atmosphere from the Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS) aboard NASA's Cassini spacecraft to generate transit spectra. Data span 0.88-5 microns at a resolution of 12-18 nm, with uncertainties typically smaller than 1%. Our approach exploits symmetry between occultations and transits, producing transit radius spectra that inherently include the effects of haze multiple scattering, refraction, and gas absorption. We use a…
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