Exploring H$_2$O Prominence in Reflection Spectra of Cool Giant Planets
Ryan J. MacDonald, Mark S. Marley, Jonathan J. Fortney, Nikole K., Lewis

TL;DR
This study investigates how water vapor features appear in the reflected light spectra of cool giant exoplanets, revealing conditions under which water can be detected and how it informs planetary composition.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive parameter space analysis of H2O spectral features in cool giant exoplanets, highlighting the effects of temperature, gravity, metallicity, and cloud sedimentation.
Findings
H2O features are prominent at specific wavelengths like 0.94um and 0.83um.
Detection depends on high-altitude water clouds and planetary parameters.
Water absorption features are detectable in planets slightly warmer than Jupiter.
Abstract
The H2O abundance of a planetary atmosphere is a powerful indicator of formation conditions. Inferring H2O in the solar system giant planets is challenging, due to condensation depleting the upper atmosphere of water vapour. Substantially warmer hot Jupiter exoplanets readily allow detections of H2O via transmission spectroscopy, but such signatures are often diminished by the presence of clouds made of other species. In contrast, highly scattering H2O clouds can brighten planets in reflected light, enhancing molecular signatures. Here, we present an extensive parameter space survey of the prominence of H2O absorption features in reflection spectra of cool (Teff<400K) giant exoplanetary atmospheres. The impact of effective temperature, gravity, metallicity, and sedimentation efficiency is explored. We find prominent H2O features around 0.94um, 0.83um, and across a wide spectral region…
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