Thermal Emission and Albedo Spectra of Super Earths with Flat Transmission Spectra
Caroline V. Morley, Jonathan J. Fortney, Mark S. Marley, Kevin Zahnle,, Michael Line, Eliza Kempton, Nikole Lewis, Kerri Cahoy

TL;DR
This paper models super Earth atmospheres with clouds and hazes, predicting their transmission, thermal emission, and reflected spectra to aid future observational characterization despite featureless spectra.
Contribution
It introduces comprehensive models of super Earth atmospheres with thick clouds and hazes, predicting observable spectral signatures across different wavelengths and temperatures.
Findings
Thick clouds produce featureless near-infrared transmission spectra.
Hazy thermal spectra show emission features due to inversion layers.
Reflected light spectra can distinguish cloudy from hazy atmospheres.
Abstract
Planets larger than Earth and smaller than Neptune are some of the most numerous in the galaxy, but observational efforts to understand this population have proved challenging because optically thick clouds or hazes at high altitudes obscure molecular features (Kreidberg et al. 2014b). We present models of super Earths that include thick clouds and hazes and predict their transmission, thermal emission, and reflected light spectra. Very thick, lofted clouds of salts or sulfides in high metallicity (1000x solar) atmospheres create featureless transmission spectra in the near-infrared. Photochemical hazes with a range of particle sizes also create featureless transmission spectra at lower metallicities. Cloudy thermal emission spectra have muted features more like blackbodies, and hazy thermal emission spectra have emission features caused by an inversion layer at altitudes where the haze…
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