Evidence for the Direct Detection of the Thermal Spectrum of the Non-Transiting Hot Gas Giant HD 88133 b
Danielle Piskorz, Bjorn Benneke, Nathan R. Crockett, Alexandra C., Lockwood, Geoffrey A. Blake, Travis S. Barman, Chad F. Bender, Marta L., Bryan, John S. Carr, Debra A. Fischer, Andrew W. Howard, Howard Isaacson,, John A. Johnson

TL;DR
This study successfully detects the thermal emission spectrum of the non-transiting hot gas giant HD 88133 b using high-resolution near-infrared spectroscopy, revealing its orbital and atmospheric properties.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates a method to directly detect the thermal spectrum of a non-transiting exoplanet through multi-epoch high-resolution spectroscopy and cross-correlation analysis.
Findings
Detected the emission spectrum of HD 88133 b.
Measured the planet's orbital velocity and inclination.
Identified water vapor as a key atmospheric component.
Abstract
We target the thermal emission spectrum of the non-transiting gas giant HD 88133 b with high-resolution near-infrared spectroscopy, by treating the planet and its host star as a spectroscopic binary. For sufficiently deep summed flux observations of the star and planet across multiple epochs, it is possible to resolve the signal of the hot gas giant's atmosphere compared to the brighter stellar spectrum, at a level consistent with the aggregate shot noise of the full data set. To do this, we first perform a principal component analysis to remove the contribution of the Earth's atmosphere to the observed spectra. Then, we use a cross-correlation analysis to tease out the spectra of the host star and HD 88133 b to determine its orbit and identify key sources of atmospheric opacity. In total, six epochs of Keck NIRSPEC L band observations and three epochs of Keck NIRSPEC K band…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements
