VUV-absorption cross section of carbon dioxide from 150 to 800 K and applications to warm exoplanetary atmospheres
Olivia Venot, Yves B\'enilan, Nicolas Fray, Marie-Claire Gazeau,, Franck Lef\`evre, Et-touhami Es-sebbar, Eric H\'ebrard, Martin Schwell,, Chiheb Bahrini, Franck Montmessin, Maxence Lef\`evre, Ingo P. Waldmann

TL;DR
This study provides high-resolution VUV absorption cross sections of CO₂ across 150-800K, revealing temperature-dependent variations that significantly influence atmospheric photochemistry and spectra of warm exoplanets.
Contribution
It offers the first comprehensive high-resolution CO₂ absorption data from 150 to 800K and demonstrates its impact on atmospheric modeling of exoplanets.
Findings
CO₂ absorption cross section increases with temperature.
Temperature-dependent data significantly alter predicted atmospheric compositions.
Variations in absorption affect synthetic transmission spectra by up to 5 ppm.
Abstract
Most exoplanets detected so far have atmospheric T significantly higher than 300K. Often close to their star, they receive an intense UV photons flux that triggers important photodissociation processes. The T dependency of VUV absorption cross sections are poorly known, leading to an undefined uncertainty in atmospheric models. Similarly, data measured at low T similar to that of the high atmosphere of Mars, Venus, and Titan are often lacking. Our aim is to quantify the T dependency of the abs. cross section of important molecules in planetary atmospheres. We want to provide both high-resolution data at T prevailing in these media and a simple parameterization of the absorption in order to simplify its use in photochemical models. This study focuses on carbon dioxide. We performed experimental measurements of CO absorption cross section with synchrotron radiation for the wavelength…
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