Exoplanet Atmospheres at High Spectral Resolution
J. L. Birkby

TL;DR
High resolution spectroscopy (HRS) is a powerful technique for detecting and characterizing exoplanet atmospheres by resolving molecular features, measuring orbital velocities, and analyzing atmospheric dynamics, even for non-transiting planets.
Contribution
This review details the HRS technique for exoplanet atmospheric studies, emphasizing its ability to detect non-transiting planets and analyze atmospheric properties with high spectral resolution.
Findings
HRS can detect both transiting and non-transiting exoplanets.
It enables measurement of planetary orbital velocities and true masses.
HRS provides insights into atmospheric composition, structure, and dynamics.
Abstract
The spectrum of an exoplanet reveals the physical, chemical, and biological processes that have shaped its history and govern its future. However, observations of exoplanet spectra are complicated by the overwhelming glare of their host stars. This review chapter focuses on high resolution spectroscopy (HRS; R=25,000-100,000), which helps to disentangle and isolate the exoplanet's spectrum. At high spectral resolution, molecular features are resolved into a dense forest of individual lines in a pattern that is unique for a given molecule. For close-in planets, the spectral lines undergo large Doppler shifts during the planet's orbit, while the host star and Earth's spectral features remain essentially stationary, enabling a velocity separation of the planet. For slower-moving, wide-orbit planets, HRS aided by high contrast imaging instead isolates their spectra using their spatial…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
