A continuum from clear to cloudy hot-Jupiter exoplanets without primordial water depletion
David K. Sing, Jonathan J. Fortney, Nikolay Nikolov, Hannah R., Wakeford, Tiffany Kataria, Thomas M. Evans, Suzanne Aigrain, Gilda E., Ballester, Adam S. Burrows, Drake Deming, Jean-Michel D\'esert, Neale P., Gibson, Gregory W. Henry, Catherine M. Huitson, Heather A. Knutson

TL;DR
This study analyzes ten hot-Jupiter exoplanets across a broad wavelength range, revealing a spectrum from clear to cloudy atmospheres and showing that clouds, not primordial water depletion, cause weak water signatures.
Contribution
It provides the first comparative analysis covering 0.3-5 micrometres, linking optical-infrared spectral differences to cloud presence rather than water depletion.
Findings
Clear atmospheres show strong water absorption lines.
Cloudy atmospheres exhibit weak water features.
Optical-infrared radius differences correlate with cloudiness.
Abstract
Thousands of transiting exoplanets have been discovered, but spectral analysis of their atmospheres has so far been dominated by a small number of exoplanets and data spanning relatively narrow wavelength ranges (such as 1.1 to 1.7 {\mu}m). Recent studies show that some hot-Jupiter exoplanets have much weaker water absorption features in their near-infrared spectra than predicted. The low amplitude of water signatures could be explained by very low water abundances, which may be a sign that water was depleted in the protoplanetary disk at the planet's formation location, but it is unclear whether this level of depletion can actually occur. Alternatively, these weak signals could be the result of obscuration by clouds or hazes, as found in some optical spectra. Here we report results from a comparative study of ten hot Jupiters covering the wavelength range 0.3-5 micrometres, which…
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