Investigating the detectability of hydrocarbons in exoplanet atmospheres with JWST
Danny Gasman, Michiel Min, Katy L. Chubb

TL;DR
This study assesses the detectability of hydrocarbons like methane and acetylene in exoplanet atmospheres using JWST, highlighting the importance of instrument choice, abundance levels, and target brightness for successful retrievals.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of hydrocarbon detectability in exoplanet atmospheres with JWST, considering various instruments and planetary parameters.
Findings
Hydrocarbon detection is feasible above certain abundance thresholds.
Combining multiple instruments improves detection accuracy.
Instrument sensitivity and target brightness significantly affect retrieval success.
Abstract
We investigate at what abundances various hydrocarbon molecules (e.g. acetylene (CH), ethylene (CH), and methane (CH)) become detectable when observing the atmospheres of various planets using JWST. We focused on atmospheric models based on the parameters of a small sample of planets: HD 189733b, HD 209458b, HD 97658b, and Kepler-30c. We computed model transmission spectra using the Bayesian retrieval package ARCiS. We simulated observed spectra using the PandExo package. We subsequently ran retrievals on these spectra to determine whether the molecular abundances can be accurately retrieved from these simulated spectra. We find that generally we can detect and retrieve abundances of the hydrocarbon species as long as they have a VMR above approximately 1x10-1x10, at least for the brighter targets. There are variations based on planet type and…
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