Directly imaged exoplanets in reflected starlight. The importance of knowing the planet radius
\'Oscar Carri\'on-Gonz\'alez, Antonio Garc\'ia Mu\~noz, Juan Cabrera,, Szil\'ard Csizmadia, Nuno C. Santos, Heike Rauer

TL;DR
This study explores how reflected-starlight spectra can reveal exoplanet characteristics, emphasizing the critical role of knowing the planet's radius for accurate atmospheric retrievals, especially for super-Earths like Barnard's Star b.
Contribution
It demonstrates the importance of prior radius knowledge in spectral analysis and develops a retrieval framework for inferring atmospheric and planetary parameters from reflected light spectra.
Findings
Knowing the planet radius improves atmospheric parameter constraints.
Without radius information, cloud detection and methane estimates are less reliable.
The planet radius can be constrained within a factor of two from spectral data.
Abstract
We have investigated the information content in reflected-starlight spectra of exoplanets. We specify our analysis to Barnard's Star b candidate super-Earth, for which we assume a radius 0.6 times that of Neptune, an atmosphere dominated by H-He, and a CH volume mixing ratio of 510. The main conclusions of our study are however planet-independent. We set up a model of the exoplanet described by seven parameters including its radius, atmospheric methane abundance and basic properties of a cloud layer. We generate synthetic spectra at zero phase (full disk illumination) from 500 to 900 nm and spectral resolution R125-225. We simulate a measured spectrum with a simplified, wavelength-independent noise model at Signal-to-Noise ratio S/N=10. With an MCMC-based retrieval methodology, we analyse which planet/atmosphere parameters can be inferred from the measured…
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