The Roasting Marshmallows Program with IGRINS on Gemini South I: Composition and Climate of the Ultra Hot Jupiter WASP-18 b
Matteo Brogi, Vanessa Emeka-Okafor, Michael R. Line, Siddharth Gandhi,, Lorenzo Pino, Eliza M.-R. Kempton, Emily Rauscher, Vivien Parmentier, Jacob, L. Bean, Gregory N. Mace, Nicolas B. Cowan, Evgenya Shkolnik, Joost P., Wardenier, Megan Mansfield, Luis Welbanks, Peter Smith

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution infrared spectroscopy to analyze the atmosphere of the ultra-hot Jupiter WASP-18b, detecting key molecules, retrieving atmospheric properties, and exploring thermal dissociation effects to understand its composition and climate.
Contribution
First high-resolution infrared observations of WASP-18b's atmosphere, revealing molecular detections, thermal inversion, and insights into thermal dissociation effects on atmospheric retrievals.
Findings
Detected H2O, CO, and OH with high confidence.
Measured a super-stellar C/O ratio and metallicity.
Identified potential Doppler shifts indicating atmospheric dynamics.
Abstract
We present high-resolution dayside thermal emission observations of the exoplanet WASP-18b using IGRINS on Gemini South. We remove stellar and telluric signatures using standard algorithms, and we extract the planet signal via cross correlation with model spectra. We detect the atmosphere of WASP-18b at a signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of 5.9 using a full chemistry model, measure H2O (SNR=3.3), CO (SNR=4.0), and OH (SNR=4.8) individually, and confirm previous claims of a thermal inversion layer. The three species are confidently detected (>4) with a Bayesian inference framework, which we also use to retrieve abundance, temperature, and velocity information. For this ultra-hot Jupiter (UHJ), thermal dissociation processes likely play an important role. Retrieving abundances constant with altitude and allowing the temperature-pressure profile to freely adjust results in a moderately…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Isotope Analysis in Ecology · Space Exploration and Technology
