Water absorption in the transmission spectrum of the water-world candidate GJ9827d
Pierre-Alexis Roy, Bj\"orn Benneke, Caroline Piaulet, Michael A., Gully-Santiago, Ian J. M. Crossfield, Caroline V. Morley, Laura Kreidberg,, Thomas Mikal-Evans, Jonathan Brande, Simon Delisle, Thomas P. Greene, Kevin, K. Hardegree-Ullman, Travis Barman, Jessie L. Christiansen

TL;DR
This study reports the detection of water vapor in the atmosphere of the small exoplanet GJ9827d, suggesting it may be a water world with a volatile-rich atmosphere, and is the smallest exoplanet with such a detection to date.
Contribution
First detection of water vapor in the atmosphere of a sub-Neptune smaller than 2.2 R⊕, indicating a possible water world and expanding understanding of small exoplanet atmospheres.
Findings
Water vapor detected at 3.39σ significance in GJ9827d's transmission spectrum.
The water feature is not caused by star spots or observational artifacts.
GJ9827d likely hosts a volatile-rich, water-dominated atmosphere.
Abstract
Recent work on the characterization of small exoplanets has allowed us to accumulate growing evidence that the sub-Neptunes with radii greater than often host H/He-dominated atmospheres both from measurements of their low bulk densities and direct detections of their low mean-molecular-mass atmospheres. However, the smaller sub-Neptunes in the 1.5-2.2 R size regime are much less understood, and often have bulk densities that can be explained either by the H/He-rich scenario, or by a volatile-dominated composition known as the "water world" scenario. Here, we report the detection of water vapor in the transmission spectrum of the R sub-Neptune GJ9827d obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope. We observed 11 HST/WFC3 transits of GJ9827d and find an absorption feature at 1.4m in its transit spectrum, which is best explained…
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