CUTE reveals escaping metals in the upper atmosphere of the ultra-hot Jupiter WASP-189b
A. G. Sreejith, Kevin France, Luca Fossati, Tommi T. Koskinen, Arika, Egan, P. Wilson Cauley, Patricio. E. Cubillos, S. Ambily, Chenliang Huang,5, Panayotis Lavvas, Brian T. Fleming, Jean-Michel Desert, Nicholas Nell, Pascal, Petit, Aline Vidotto

TL;DR
This study presents ultraviolet observations of the ultra-hot Jupiter WASP-189b, revealing an extended, hot upper atmosphere with metal absorption lines and higher-than-expected temperatures, indicating atmospheric escape processes.
Contribution
First near-ultraviolet transit spectroscopy of WASP-189b demonstrating metal absorption and atmospheric properties beyond current models.
Findings
Detected metal absorption lines, including MgII and FeII.
Estimated atmospheric temperature around 15000 K.
Observed a larger transit depth in UV indicating extended atmosphere.
Abstract
Ultraviolet observations of Ultra-hot Jupiters (UHJs), exoplanets with temperatures over 2000\,K, provide us with an opportunity to investigate if and how atmospheric escape shapes their upper atmosphere. Near-ultraviolet transit spectroscopy offers a unique tool to study this process owing to the presence of strong metal lines and a bright photospheric continuum as the light source against which the absorbing gas is observed. WASP-189b is one of the hottest planets discovered to date, with a day-side temperature of about 3400\,K orbiting a bright A-type star. We present the first near-ultraviolet observations of WASP-189b, acquired with the Colorado Ultraviolet Transit Experiment (). is a 6U NASA-funded ultraviolet spectroscopy mission, dedicated to monitoring short-period transiting planets. WASP-189b was one of the early science targets and was observed during…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
