From thermal dissociation to condensation in the atmospheres of ultra hot Jupiters: WASP-121b in context
Vivien Parmentier, Mike R. Line, Jacob L. Bean, Megan Mansfield, Laura, Kreidberg, Roxana Lupu, Channon Visscher, Jean-Michel Desert, Jonathan J., Fortney, Magalie Deleuil, Jacob Arcangeli, Adam P. Showman, Mark S. Marley

TL;DR
This paper investigates how thermal dissociation, ionization, and clouds influence the thermal structures and spectra of ultra hot Jupiters, especially WASP-121b, revealing molecular dissociation as key to understanding their spectral features.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of the effects of thermal dissociation and related processes on ultra hot Jupiters' spectra, expanding understanding beyond previous observations.
Findings
Most molecules are thermally dissociated on the dayside.
Water spectral features are significantly weakened by dissociation and H- opacity.
CO remains largely unaffected by dissociation, maintaining its spectral feature.
Abstract
A new class of exoplanets has emerged: the ultra hot Jupiters, the hottest close-in gas giants. Most of them have weaker than expected spectral features in the bandpass probed by HST/WFC3 but stronger spectral features at longer wavelengths probed by Spitzer. This led previous authors to puzzling conclusions about the thermal structures and chemical abundances of these planets. Using the SPARC/MITgcm, we investigate how thermal dissociation, ionization, H opacity and clouds shape the thermal structures and spectral properties of ultra hot Jupiters with a special focus on WASP-121b. We expand our findings to the whole population of ultra hot Jupiters through analytical quantification of the thermal dissociation and its influence on the strength of spectral features. We predict that most molecules are thermally dissociated and alkalies are ionized in the dayside…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Planetary Science and Exploration · Scientific Research and Discoveries
