# New Avenues for Thermal Inversions in hot Jupiters

**Authors:** Siddharth Gandhi, Nikku Madhusudhan

arXiv: 1903.11603 · 2019-03-29

## TL;DR

This paper investigates new mechanisms for thermal inversions in hot Jupiters, highlighting the roles of metal-rich species and low water abundance, expanding understanding beyond traditional TiO/VO explanations.

## Contribution

It introduces two novel pathways for thermal inversions involving metal-rich species and low infrared opacity, emphasizing the importance of both refractory and volatile atmospheric components.

## Key findings

- AlO, CaO, NaH, MgH can cause strong inversions
- Low H2O abundance with high C/O ratio can induce inversions
- Refractory species detection can be achieved via visible spectroscopy

## Abstract

Thermal emission spectra of hot Jupiters have led to key constraints on thermal inversions (or 'stratospheres') in their atmospheres with important implications for their atmospheric processes. Canonically, thermal inversions in hot Jupiters have been suggested to be caused by species such as TiO and VO which have strong visible opacity to absorb incident starlight. We explore two new avenues for thermal inversions in hot Jupiters, exploring both the visible and infrared opacities in their atmospheres. Firstly, by exploring a range of metal-rich species we find that four species (AlO, CaO, NaH and MgH) provide visible opacities comparable to TiO/VO and can cause strong inversions with reasonable abundances. Secondly, we show that a low infrared opacity caused by a low H$_2$O abundance, e.g. through a C/O~1, can also lead to strong thermal inversions even with low abundances of the visible absorbers mentioned above. We find that increasing the C/O ratio towards unity requires almost 2 orders of magnitude lower abundances for the visible absorbers in order for an inversion to form. Finally, we explore the thermal inversion in WASP-121b and find that it can be explained by all the visible absorbers listed above for different C/O ratios. Our study demonstrates the importance of both the refractory and volatile species in governing the physicochemical processes in hot Jupiter atmospheres. Spectroscopic observations in the visible have the potential to detect the newly proposed refractory species that can cause thermal inversions in addition to TiO and VO.

## Full text

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## Figures

10 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1903.11603/full.md

## References

62 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1903.11603/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1903.11603