A comparative study of WASP-67b and HAT-P-38b from WFC3 data
Giovanni Bruno, Nikole K. Lewis, Kevin B. Stevenson, Joseph, Filippazzo, Matthew Hill, Jonathan D. Fraine, Hannah R. Wakeford, Drake, Deming, Brian Kilpatrick, Michael R. Line, Caroline V. Morley, Karen A., Collins, Dennis M. Conti, Joseph Garlitz, Joseph E. Rodriguez

TL;DR
This study compares the atmospheres of two giant exoplanets with similar temperature and gravity using HST WFC3 data, revealing differences in cloud cover and composition that relate to their formation history.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of two exoplanets with nearly identical parameters, highlighting how atmospheric features vary and suggesting links to their formation history.
Findings
HAT-P-38b has a clear atmosphere with water detection.
WASP-67b shows muted water absorption, indicating clouds or metal-rich composition.
Differences support the idea that atmospheric features reflect formation history.
Abstract
Atmospheric temperature and planetary gravity are thought to be the main parameters affecting cloud formation in giant exoplanet atmospheres. Recent attempts to understand cloud formation have explored wide regions of the equilibrium temperature-gravity parameter space. In this study, we instead compare the case of two giant planets with nearly identical equilibrium temperature ( ) and gravity (. During Cycle 23, we collected WFC3/G141 observations of the two planets, WASP-67 b and HAT-P-38 b. HAT-P-38 b, with mass 0.42 M and radius 1.4 , exhibits a relatively clear atmosphere with a clear detection of water. We refine the orbital period of this planet with new observations, obtaining . WASP-67 b, with mass 0.27 M and radius…
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