Atmospheric Characterization of Hot Jupiter CoRoT-1 b Using the Wide Field Camera 3 on the Hubble Space Telescope
Kayli Glidic (1), Everett Schlawin (1), Lindsey Wiser (2), Yifan Zhou, (3), Drake Deming (4), Michael Line (2) ((1) Steward Observatory The, University of Arizona, (2) School of Earth & Space Exploration Arizona State, University

TL;DR
This study uses Hubble's WFC3 to analyze CoRoT-1 b, a transitional hot Jupiter, revealing a featureless spectrum and an inverted temperature-pressure profile, setting the stage for future JWST observations.
Contribution
First detailed spectrophotometric analysis of CoRoT-1 b in the transitional temperature regime using HST WFC3 stare mode.
Findings
Spectra are featureless and consistent with an inverted T-P profile.
Correcting for the ramp effect improves spectral constraints.
Proposes CoRoT-1 b as a promising target for JWST follow-up.
Abstract
Exoplanet CoRoT-1 b is intriguing because we predict it to be a transitional planet between hot Jupiters (equilibrium temperatures ~ 1500 K) and ultra-hot Jupiters (equilibrium temperatures > 2000 K). In 2012, observations of CoRoT-1 b included one primary transit and three secondary eclipses with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) combined with the G141 grism (1.1-1.7 m) in stare mode. We aimed to further investigate CoRoT-1 b through its secondary eclipses, producing spectrophotometric light curves corrected for charge trapping, also known as the ramp effect in time-series observations with the WFC3. We found that, when correcting for the ramp effect and using the typically discarded first orbit, we are better capable of constraining and optimizing the emission and transmission spectra. We did a grid retrieval in this transitional temperature regime and…
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