Water vapor detection in the transmission spectra of HD 209458 b with the CARMENES NIR channel
A. S\'anchez-L\'opez, F. J. Alonso-Floriano, M. L\'opez-Puertas, I. A., G. Snellen, B. Funke, E. Nagel, F. F. Bauer, P. J. Amado, J. A. Caballero, S., Czesla, L. Nortmann, E. Pall\'e, M. Salz, A. Reiners, I. Ribas, A., Quirrenbach, G. Anglada-Escud\'e, V. J. S. B\'ejar

TL;DR
This study detects water vapor in the atmosphere of HD 209458 b using near-infrared transmission spectra from CARMENES, revealing atmospheric winds and demonstrating the potential of multi-band spectral analysis for exoplanet characterization.
Contribution
First detection of water vapor at 1.0 μm in HD 209458 b's atmosphere, showcasing multi-band near-infrared spectroscopy with CARMENES.
Findings
Water vapor detected with S/N of 6.4 in HD 209458 b.
Blueshift of --5.2 km/s indicates day-to-night winds.
Detection of H₂O from the 1.0 μm band, first in this band.
Abstract
Aims: We aim at detecting HO in the atmosphere of the hot Jupiter HD 209458 b and perform a multi-band study in the near infrared with CARMENES. Methods: The HO absorption lines from the planet's atmosphere are Doppler-shifted due to the large change in its radial velocity during transit. This shift is of the order of tens of km s, whilst the Earth's telluric and the stellar lines can be considered quasi-static. We took advantage of this to remove the telluric and stellar lines using SYSREM, a principal component analysis algorithm. The residual spectra contain the signal from thousands of planetary molecular lines well below the noise level. We retrieve this information by cross-correlating the spectra with models of the atmospheric absorption. Results: We find evidence of HO in HD 209458 b with a signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) of 6.4. The signal is blueshifted by…
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