An optical transmission spectrum for the ultra-hot Jupiter WASP-121b measured with the Hubble Space Telescope
Thomas M. Evans, David K. Sing, Jayesh Goyal, Nikolay Nikolov, Mark S., Marley, Kevin Zahnle, Gregory W. Henry, Joanna K. Barstow, Munazza K. Alam,, Jorge Sanz-Forcada, Tiffany Kataria, Nikole K. Lewis, Panayotis Lavvas, Gilda, E. Ballester, Lotfi Ben-Jaffel, Sarah D. Blumenthal

TL;DR
This study presents the first optical transmission spectrum of the ultra-hot Jupiter WASP-121b using HST, revealing atmospheric features, chemical compositions, and scattering processes that inform models of hot Jupiter atmospheres.
Contribution
It provides the first optical spectrum of WASP-121b, identifies VO spectral bands, constrains TiO abundance, and explores potential NUV absorbers affecting atmospheric properties.
Findings
Detection of VO spectral bands in the atmosphere.
Upper limit set on TiO abundance, suggesting condensation.
Steep increase in opacity at short wavelengths, possibly due to SH absorption.
Abstract
We present an atmospheric transmission spectrum for the ultra-hot Jupiter WASP-121b, measured using the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) onboard the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). Across the 0.47-1 micron wavelength range, the data imply an atmospheric opacity comparable to - and in some spectroscopic channels exceeding - that previously measured at near-infrared wavelengths (1.15-1.65 micron). Wavelength-dependent variations in the opacity rule out a gray cloud deck at a confidence level of 3.8-sigma and may instead be explained by VO spectral bands. We find a cloud-free model assuming chemical equilibrium for a temperature of 1500K and metal enrichment of 10-30x solar matches these data well. Using a free-chemistry retrieval analysis, we estimate a VO abundance of -6.6(-0.3,+0.2) dex. We find no evidence for TiO and place a 3-sigma upper limit of -7.9 dex on its abundance,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
