Photochemical hazes can trace the C/O ratio in exoplanet atmospheres
Lia Corrales, Lisseth Gavilan, D. J. Teal, Eliza M.-R. Kempton

TL;DR
This study develops new laboratory-derived optical properties of photochemical hazes grown in oxygen-rich environments to better interpret exoplanet atmospheres and constrain their C/O ratios, especially when molecular features are obscured.
Contribution
It provides updated haze opacities based on oxygen-influenced tholins, improving atmospheric models and C/O ratio estimations for exoplanets.
Findings
Oxygen increases haze absorption across wavelengths.
Haze scattering features shift with oxygen content.
GJ 1214b data favor C/O=1 or solar models over Titan-like haze.
Abstract
Photochemical hazes are suspected to obscure molecular features, such as water, from detection in the transmission spectra of exoplanets with atmospheric temperatures < 800 K. The opacities of laboratory produced organic compounds (tholins) from Khare et al. (1984) have become a standard for modeling haze in exoplanet atmospheres. However, these tholins were grown in an oxygen-free, Titan-like environment that is very different from typical assumptions for exoplanets, where C/O~0.5. This work presents the 0.13-10 micron complex refractive indices derived from laboratory transmission measurements of tholins grown in environments with different oxygen abundances. With the increasing uptake of oxygen, absorption increases across the entire wavelength range, and a scattering feature around 6 micron shifts towards shorter wavelengths and becomes more peaked around 5.8 micron, due to a C=O…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtmospheric Ozone and Climate · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Spacecraft Design and Technology
