Why is it So Hot in Here? Exploring Population Trends in $\textit{Spitzer}$ Thermal Emission Observations of Hot Jupiters using Planet-Specific Self-Consistent Atmospheric Models
Jayesh M Goyal, Nikole K Lewis, Hannah R Wakeford, Ryan J MacDonald, and Nathan J Mayne

TL;DR
This study uses planet-specific atmospheric models to interpret Spitzer thermal emission data from 34 hot Jupiters, revealing insights into their heat redistribution, atmospheric composition, and the limitations of current observational data.
Contribution
It introduces a self-consistent modeling approach to analyze population-level trends in hot Jupiter atmospheres using Spitzer data, highlighting the role of recirculation and chemical ratios.
Findings
Most hot Jupiters are inconsistent with blackbody emission.
High-temperature planets favor inefficient heat recirculation.
Model predictions align within ±1 σ of observed eclipse depths.
Abstract
Thermal emission has now been observed from many dozens of exoplanet atmospheres, opening the gateway to population-level characterization. Here, we provide theoretical explanations for observed trends in IRAC channel 1 (3.6 ) and channel 2 (4.5 ) photometric eclipse depths (EDs) across a population of 34 hot Jupiters. We apply planet-specific, self-consistent atmospheric models, spanning a range of recirculation factors, metallicities, and C/O ratios, to probe the information content of secondary eclipse observations across the hot-Jupiter population. We show that most hot Jupiters are inconsistent with blackbodies from observations alone. We demonstrate that the majority of hot Jupiters are consistent with low energy redistribution between the dayside and nightside (hotter dayside than expected with efficient…
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