A solar C/O and sub-solar metallicity in a hot Jupiter atmosphere
Michael R. Line, Matteo Brogi, Jacob L. Bean, Siddharth Gandhi, Joseph, Zalesky, Vivien Parmentier, Peter Smith, Gregory N. Mace, Megan Mansfield,, Eliza M.-R. Kempton, Jonathan J. Fortney, Evgenya Shkolnik, Jennifer, Patience, Emily Rauscher, Jean-Michel D\'esert

TL;DR
This study measures the atmospheric C/O ratio and metallicity of hot Jupiter WASP-77Ab, revealing a near-solar C/O ratio and sub-solar metallicity, providing insights into its formation and migration history.
Contribution
First simultaneous constraints on H2O and CO in a hot Jupiter's atmosphere, enabling precise determination of C/O ratio and metallicity.
Findings
C/O ratio is near solar at 0.59±0.08
Metallicity is sub-solar at approximately 0.33× Solar
Results suggest a disk migration history rather than disk-free C-rich scenario.
Abstract
Measurements of the atmospheric carbon (C) and oxygen (O) relative to hydrogen (H) in hot Jupiters (relative to their host stars) provide insight into their formation location and subsequent orbital migration. Hot Jupiters that form beyond the major volatile (H2O/CO/CO2) ice lines and subsequently migrate post disk-dissipation are predicted have atmospheric carbon-to-oxygen ratios (C/O) near 1 and subsolar metallicities, whereas planets that migrate through the disk before dissipation are predicted to be heavily polluted by infalling O-rich icy planetesimals, resulting in C/O < 0.5 and super-solar metallicities. Previous observations of hot Jupiters have been able to provide bounded constraints on either H2O or CO, but not both for the same planet, leaving uncertain the true elemental C and O inventory and subsequent C/O and metallicity determinations. Here we report spectroscopic…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
