Detection of sodium in the atmosphere of WASP-69b
N. Casasayas-Barris, E. Palle, G. Nowak, F. Yan, L. Nortmann, F., Murgas

TL;DR
This study detects sodium in the atmosphere of exoplanet WASP-69b using high-resolution transit spectroscopy, demonstrating the method's effectiveness and comparing results with a well-studied hot Jupiter, HD 189733b.
Contribution
It presents a detailed methodology for detecting sodium in exoplanet atmospheres and applies it to WASP-69b, including a comparison with HD 189733b, advancing ground-based atmospheric characterization techniques.
Findings
Detected sodium absorption in WASP-69b's atmosphere at 5σ significance.
Resolved sodium doublet in HD 189733b consistent with previous studies.
Measured blueshift in sodium lines indicating atmospheric dynamics.
Abstract
Transit spectroscopy is one of the most commonly used methods to characterize exoplanets atmospheres. From the ground, these observations are very challenging due to the terrestrial atmosphere and its intrinsic variations, but high-spectral resolution observations overcome this difficulty by resolving the spectral lines and taking advantage of the different Doppler velocities of the Earth, the host star and the exoplanet. We analyze the transmission spectrum around the Na I doublet at 589 nm of the exoplanet WASP-69b, a hot Jupiter orbiting a K-type star with a period of 3.868 days, and compare the analysis to that of the well-know hot Jupiter HD 189733b. We also present the analysis of the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect for WASP-69b. Two transits of WASP-69b were observed with the HARPS-North spectrograph (R = 115 000) at the TNG telescope. We perform a telluric contamination subtraction…
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