Variable and super-sonic winds in the atmosphere of an ultra-hot giant planet
Anusha Pai Asnodkar, Ji Wang, Jason D. Eastman, P. Wilson Cauley, B., Scott Gaudi, Ilya Ilyin, and Klaus Strassmeier

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution spectroscopy to detect and analyze strong, variable day-to-nightside winds in the atmosphere of the ultra-hot Jupiter KELT-9 b, challenging existing atmospheric models.
Contribution
It provides the first evidence of significant temporal variability in atmospheric winds of an ultra-hot Jupiter, updating the planet's ephemeris for consistent wind detection.
Findings
Detected ~10 km/s day-to-nightside winds on KELT-9 b.
Identified temporal wind variability of 5-8 km/s over weeks to years.
Challenged existing general circulation models with observed wind variability.
Abstract
Hot Jupiters receive intense irradiation from their stellar hosts. The resulting extreme environments in their atmospheres allow us to study the conditions that drive planetary atmospheric dynamics, e.g., global-scale winds. General circulation models predict day-to-nightside winds and equatorial jets with speeds on the order of a few km . To test these models, we apply high-resolution transmission spectroscopy using the PEPSI spectrograph on the Large Binocular Telescope to study the atmosphere of KELT-9 b, an ultra-hot Jupiter and currently the hottest known planet. We measure 10 km day-to-nightside winds traced by Fe II features in the planet's atmosphere. This is at odds with previous literature (including data taken with PEPSI), which report no significant day-to-nightside winds on KELT-9 b. We identify the cause of this discrepancy as due…
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