A unique hot Jupiter spectral sequence with evidence for compositional diversity
Megan Mansfield, Michael R. Line, Jacob L. Bean, Jonathan J. Fortney,, Vivien Parmentier, Lindsey Wiser, Eliza M.-R. Kempton, Ehsan Gharib-Nezhad,, David K. Sing, Mercedes L\'opez-Morales, Claire Baxter, Jean-Michel D\'esert,, Mark R. Swain, Gael M. Roudier

TL;DR
This study analyzes the thermal emission spectra of hot Jupiters, revealing a common trend in water absorption features related to temperature and evidence for compositional diversity among these exoplanets.
Contribution
It provides the first population-level analysis of hot Jupiter thermal emission spectra, identifying a trend in water features and evidence for compositional variations.
Findings
Water absorption features vary with temperature among hot Jupiters.
Observed spectral scatter suggests diversity in metallicity and elemental ratios.
Spectral trends align broadly with theoretical models of irradiation effects.
Abstract
The emergent spectra of close-in, giant exoplanets ("hot Jupiters") are expected to be distinct from those of self-luminous objects with similar effective temperatures because hot Jupiters are primarily heated from above by their host stars rather than internally from the release of energy from their formation. Theoretical models predict a continuum of dayside spectra for hot Jupiters as a function of irradiation level, with the coolest planets having absorption features in their spectra, intermediate-temperature planets having emission features due to thermal inversions, and the hottest planets having blackbody-like spectra due to molecular dissociation and continuum opacity from the H- ion. Absorption and emission features have been detected in the spectra of a number of individual hot Jupiters, and population-level trends have been observed in photometric measurements. However, there…
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