The Featureless HST/WFC3 Transmission Spectrum of the Rocky Exoplanet GJ 1132b: No Evidence For A Cloud-Free Primordial Atmosphere and Constraints on Starspot Contamination
Jessica E. Libby-Roberts (1), Zachory K. Berta-Thompson (1), Hannah, Diamond-Lowe (2), Michael A. Gully-Santiago (3), Jonathan M. Irwin (4), Eliza, M.-R. Kempton (5), Benjamin V. Rackham (6), David Charbonneau (4),, Jean-Michel Desert (7), Jason A. Dittmann (8), Ryan Hofmann (1

TL;DR
This study presents a featureless transmission spectrum of GJ 1132b, indicating it likely lacks a cloud-free primordial atmosphere, and investigates starspot effects on the observed spectrum.
Contribution
First HST/WFC3 transmission spectrum of GJ 1132b showing no evidence of a cloud-free atmosphere and modeling starspot contamination effects.
Findings
No cloud-free atmospheres with metallicities <300x Solar detected
GJ 1132b's atmosphere is likely high molecular weight or obscured by aerosols
Starspot modeling constrains spot properties affecting transmission spectra
Abstract
Orbiting a M dwarf 12 pc away, the transiting exoplanet GJ 1132b is a prime target for transmission spectroscopy. With a mass of 1.7 Earth masses and radius of 1.1 Earth radii, GJ 1132b's bulk density indicates that this planet is rocky. Yet with an equilibrium temperature of 580 K, GJ 1132b may still retain some semblance of an atmosphere. Understanding whether this atmosphere exists and its composition will be vital for understanding how the atmospheres of terrestrial planets orbiting M dwarfs evolve. We observe five transits of GJ 1132b with the Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) on the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). We find a featureless transmission spectrum from 1.1--1.7 microns, ruling out cloud-free atmospheres with metallicities <300x Solar with >4.8 confidence. We combine our WFC3 results with transit depths from TESS and archival broadband and spectroscopic observations to…
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