Atmospheric characterization of the super-Jupiter HIP 99770 b with KPIC
Yapeng Zhang, Jerry W. Xuan, Dimitri Mawet, Jason J. Wang, Chih-Chun, Hsu, Jean-Bapiste Ruffio, Heather A. Knutson, Julie Inglis, Geoffrey A., Blake, Yayaati Chachan, Katelyn Horstman, Ashley Baker, Randall Bartos,, Benjamin Calvin, Sylvain Cetre, Jacques-Robert Delorme

TL;DR
This study spectroscopically characterizes the atmosphere of the super-Jupiter HIP 99770 b, revealing its chemical composition, rotation, and orbit, thereby providing insights into its formation mechanisms.
Contribution
First high-resolution spectral analysis of HIP 99770 b using KPIC, measuring atmospheric composition, rotation, and orbit to inform formation theories.
Findings
Detected H2O and CO in the atmosphere.
Measured C/O ratio and metallicity consistent with solar values.
Found low projected rotation velocity, suggesting pole-on view or magnetic braking.
Abstract
Young, self-luminous super-Jovian companions discovered by direct imaging provide a challenging test of planet formation and evolution theories. By spectroscopically characterizing the atmospheric compositions of these super-Jupiters, we can constrain their formation histories. Here we present studies of the recently discovered HIP 99770 b, a 16 MJup high-contrast companion on a 17 au orbit, using the fiber-fed high-resolution spectrograph KPIC (R~35,000) on the Keck II telescope. Our K-band observations led to detections of H2O and CO in the atmosphere of HIP 99770 b. We carried out free retrieval analyses using petitRADTRANS to measure its chemical abundances, including the metallicity and C/O ratio, projected rotation velocity (vsini), and radial velocity (RV). We found that the companion's atmosphere has C/O=0.55(-0.04/+0.06) and [M/H]=0.26(-0.23/+0.24) (1{\sigma} confidence…
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