Black Mirror: The impact of rotational broadening on the search for reflected light from 51 Pegasi b with high resolution spectroscopy
E. F. Spring, J. L. Birkby, L. Pino, R. Alonso, S. Hoyer, M. E. Young,, P. R. T. Coelho, D. Nespral, and M. L\'opez-Morales

TL;DR
This study investigates how rotational broadening affects high resolution spectroscopy detection of reflected light from exoplanets, specifically 51 Pegasi b, revealing the importance of considering broadening effects in such analyses.
Contribution
It introduces the impact of stellar rotational broadening on high resolution cross-correlation spectroscopy for exoplanet reflection detection, providing new upper limits for 51 Pegasi b.
Findings
No significant reflected light detected from 51 Pegasi b.
Broadening significantly impacts the extraction of reflected spectra.
Upper limits on contrast ratio challenge previous claims.
Abstract
The extreme contrast ratios between stars and their planets at optical wavelengths make it challenging to isolate the light reflected by exoplanet atmospheres. Yet, these reflective properties reveal key processes occurring in the atmospheres, and they also span wavelengths that include the potential O biosignature. High resolution cross-correlation spectroscopy (HRCCS) offers a robust avenue for developing techniques to extract exoplanet reflection spectra. We aimed to extract the optical reflected light spectrum of the non-transiting hot Jupiter 51 Peg b by adapting techniques designed to remove tellurics in infrared HRCCS to instead remove optical stellar lines. Importantly, we investigated the so far neglected impact of the broadening of the reflected host star spectrum due to the difference between the stellar rotation and the planet's orbital velocity. We used 484, R=115000…
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