A dayside thermal inversion in the atmosphere of WASP-19b
A. S. Rajpurohit, F. Allard, D. Homeier, O. Mousis, S. Rajpurohit

TL;DR
This study confirms a thermal inversion in WASP-19b's atmosphere, driven by intense stellar irradiation, with detailed modeling revealing H2O dissociation and CO emission features at high temperatures.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive atmospheric analysis of WASP-19b using advanced radiative transfer modeling that includes cloud formation and disequilibrium chemistry, revealing new insights into its thermal structure.
Findings
Evidence of a thermal inversion in WASP-19b's atmosphere.
H2O dissociates at pressures below 10^-2 bar.
Detection of CO emission features at 4.5 microns.
Abstract
Observations of ultra-hot Jupiters indicate the existence of thermal inversion in their atmospheres with day-side temperatures greater than 2200 K. Various physical mechanisms such as non-local thermal equilibrium, cloud formation, disequilibrium chemistry, ionisation, hydrodynamic waves and associated energy, have been omitted in previous spectral retrievals while they play an important role on the thermal structure of their upper atmospheres.We aim at exploring the atmospheric properties of WASP-19b to understand its largely featureless thermal spectra using a state-of-the-art atmosphere code that includes a detailed treatment of the most important physical and chemical processes at play in such atmospheres.We used the one-dimensional line-by-line radiative transfer code PHOENIX in its spherical symmetry configuration including the BT-Settl cloud model and C/O disequilibrium chemistry…
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