Rotation and winds of exoplanet HD 189733 b measured with high-dispersion transmission spectroscopy
M. Brogi, R. J. de Kok, S. Albrecht, I. A. G. Snellen, J. L. Birkby,, H. Schwarz

TL;DR
This study directly measures the rotation and atmospheric winds of exoplanet HD 189733 b using high-resolution transmission spectroscopy, confirming tidal locking and detecting small wind speeds, advancing understanding of hot Jupiter atmospheres.
Contribution
First direct measurement of hot Jupiter rotation and atmospheric winds using high-dispersion spectroscopy, revealing tidal locking and vertical wind shear.
Findings
Planet's rotation consistent with tidal locking at ~2.2 days
Detected small day-to-night wind speeds of about -1.7 km/s
Rotation longer than 1 day with marginal statistical significance
Abstract
Giant exoplanets orbiting very close to their parent star (hot Jupiters) are subject to tidal forces expected to synchronize their rotational and orbital periods on short timescales (tidal locking). However, spin rotation has never been measured directly for hot Jupiters. Furthermore, their atmospheres can show equatorial super-rotation via strong eastward jet streams, and/or high-altitude winds flowing from the day- to the night-side hemisphere. Planet rotation and atmospheric circulation broaden and distort the planet spectral lines to an extent that is detectable with measurements at high spectral resolution. We observed a transit of the hot Jupiter HD 189733 b around 2.3 {\mu}m and at a spectral resolution of R~10 with CRIRES at the ESO Very Large Telescope. After correcting for the stellar absorption lines and their distortion during transit (the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect), we…
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