HyDRo: Atmospheric Retrieval of Rocky Exoplanets in Thermal Emission
Anjali A. A. Piette, Nikku Madhusudhan, Avi M. Mandell

TL;DR
HyDRo is a new atmospheric retrieval framework that interprets thermal emission spectra of rocky exoplanets without prior assumptions, enabling constraints on their atmospheric composition using JWST data.
Contribution
HyDRo introduces a flexible retrieval method for secondary atmospheres of rocky exoplanets, capable of analyzing unknown compositions from thermal emission spectra.
Findings
Identified 30+ rocky exoplanets detectable by JWST/MIRI in fewer than 10 eclipses.
As few as 8 eclipses can constrain atmospheric composition of LHS 3844 b or GJ 1132 b.
30 eclipses of Trappist-1 b can detect CO2-rich or CO2-H2O atmospheres.
Abstract
Emission spectroscopy is a promising technique to observe atmospheres of rocky exoplanets, probing both their chemistry and thermal profiles. We present HyDRo, an atmospheric retrieval framework for thermal emission spectra of rocky exoplanets. HyDRo does not make prior assumptions about the background atmospheric composition, and can therefore be used to interpret spectra of secondary atmospheres with unknown compositions. We use HyDRo to assess the chemical constraints which can be placed on rocky exoplanet atmospheres using JWST. Firstly, we identify the best currently-known rocky exoplanet candidates for spectroscopic observations in thermal emission with JWST, finding >30 known rocky exoplanets whose thermal emission will be detectable by JWST/MIRI in fewer than 10 eclipses at R~10. We then consider the observations required to characterise the atmospheres of three promising rocky…
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