Is TiO emission present in the ultra-hot Jupiter WASP-33b? A reassessment using the improved ExoMol Toto line list
Dilovan B. Serindag, Stevanus K. Nugroho, Paul Molli\`ere, Ernst J. W., de Mooij, Neale P. Gibson, Ignas A. G. Snellen

TL;DR
This study reanalyzed the presence of TiO emission in WASP-33b using an improved line list, confirming a statistically significant signal but raising questions about previous detections due to inconsistent results.
Contribution
The paper applies the updated ExoMol Toto line list to high-resolution spectra, providing a reassessment of TiO detection in WASP-33b and highlighting discrepancies with earlier findings.
Findings
Detected TiO emission at 4.3σ significance with the new line list.
The new models yielded a weaker signal than previous models, offset in parameter space.
Results are ambiguous, casting doubt on previous TiO detections in WASP-33b.
Abstract
[abridged] Efficient absorption of stellar UV and visible radiation by TiO and VO is predicted to drive temperature inversions in the upper atmospheres of hot Jupiters. However, few inversions or detections of TiO or VO have been reported, and results are often contradictory. Using the improved ExoMol Toto line list, we searched for TiO emission in the dayside spectrum of WASP-33b using the same data in which the molecule was previously detected with an older line list at 4.8. We intended to confirm the molecular detection and quantify the signal improvement offered by the ExoMol Toto line list. Data from the High Dispersion Spectrograph on the Subaru Telescope was extracted and reduced in an identical manner to the previous study. Stellar and telluric contamination were then removed. High-resolution TiO emission models of WASP-33b were created using the radiative transfer code…
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