Detecting H$_2$O with CRIRES+: the case of WASP-20b
M. C. Maimone, M. Brogi, A. Chiavassa, M. E. van den Ancker, C. F., Manara, J. Leconte, S. Gandhi, W. Pluriel

TL;DR
This study demonstrates the potential of the upgraded CRIRES+ spectrograph for detecting water vapor in exoplanet atmospheres, achieving tentative detection in WASP-20b using high-resolution infrared spectroscopy.
Contribution
First application of CRIRES+ for atmospheric characterization of exoplanets, successfully detecting water vapor in WASP-20b's atmosphere with high-resolution spectroscopy.
Findings
Tentative detection of water vapor at S/N 4.2 and 4.7.
Measured planetary velocity consistent with literature.
First detection attempt using CRIRES+ in this context.
Abstract
Infrared spectroscopy over a wide spectral range and at the highest resolving powers (R>70 000) has proved to be one of the leading technique to unveil the atmospheric composition of dozens of exoplanets. The recently upgraded spectrograph CRIRES instrument at the VLT (CRIRES+) was operative for a first Science Verification in September 2021 and its new capabilities in atmospheric characterisation were ready to be tested. We analysed transmission spectra of the Hot Saturn WASP-20b in the K-band (1981-2394 nm) acquired with CRIRES+, aiming at detecting the signature of H2O and CO. We used Principal Component Analysis to remove the dominant time-dependent contaminating sources such as telluric bands and the stellar spectrum and we extracted the planet spectrum by cross-correlating observations with 1D and 3D synthetic spectra, with no circulation included. We present the tentative…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtmospheric Ozone and Climate · Spectroscopy and Laser Applications · Scientific Measurement and Uncertainty Evaluation
