On the Chemical Abundance of HR 8799 and the Planet c
Ji Wang (OSU), Jason Wang (Caltech), Bo Ma, Jeffrey Chilcote, Steve, Ertel, Olivier Guyon, Ilya Ilyin, Nemanja Jovanovic, Paul Kalas, Julien Lozi,, Bruce Macintosh, Jordan Stone, Klaus G. Strassmeier

TL;DR
This study compares the chemical abundances of the star HR 8799 and its planet c, highlighting the challenges and inconsistencies in deriving planetary compositions from high-contrast imaging data.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed abundance measurements of HR 8799 and its planet c using high-resolution spectroscopy and atmospheric retrieval, revealing significant variability and uncertainties.
Findings
Stellar abundances are consistent with solar values.
Planetary abundance retrievals vary by about 0.5 dex depending on priors.
Inconsistencies exist between different data sets and retrieval assumptions.
Abstract
Comparing chemical abundances of a planet and the host star reveals the origin and formation path. Stellar abundance is measured with high-resolution spectroscopy. Planet abundance, on the other hand, is usually inferred from low-resolution data. For directly imaged exoplanets, the data are available from a slew of high-contrast imaging/spectroscopy instruments. Here, we study the chemical abundance of HR 8799 and its planet c. We measure stellar abundance using LBT/PEPSI (R=120,000) and archival HARPS data: stellar [C/H], [O/H], and C/O are 0.110.12, 0.120.14, and 0.54, all consistent with solar values. We conduct atmospheric retrieval using newly obtained Subaru/CHARIS data together with archival Gemini/GPI and Keck/OSIRIS data. We model the planet spectrum with petitRADTRANS and conduct retrieval using PyMultiNest. Retrieved planetary abundance can vary by…
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