Quartz Clouds in the Dayside Atmosphere of the Quintessential Hot Jupiter HD 189733 b
Julie Inglis, Natasha E. Batalha, Nikole K. Lewis, Tiffany Kataria,, Heather A. Knutson, Brian M. Kilpatrick, Anna Gagnebin, Sagnick Mukherjee,, Maria M. Pettyjohn, Ian J. M. Crossfield, Trevor O. Foote, David Grant,, Gregory W. Henry, Maura Lally, Laura K. McKemmish

TL;DR
This study presents the first direct detection of silicate clouds in the dayside atmosphere of the hot Jupiter HD 189733 b using JWST/MIRI, revealing new insights into cloud composition and atmospheric structure.
Contribution
It provides the first direct evidence of silicate clouds on a hot Jupiter's day side and demonstrates the effectiveness of JWST/MIRI in characterizing exoplanet atmospheres.
Findings
Detection of H2O and H2S absorption features.
Identification of silicate clouds via 8.7 μm absorption.
Silicate clouds are preferred over clear models by 6-7σ.
Abstract
Recent mid-infrared observations with JWST/MIRI have resulted in the first direct detections of absorption features from silicate clouds in the transmission spectra of two transiting exoplanets, WASP-17 b and WASP-107 b. In this paper, we measure the mid-infrared ( m) dayside emission spectrum of the benchmark hot Jupiter HD 189733 b with MIRI LRS by combining data from two secondary eclipse observations. We confirm the previous detection of HO absorption at 6.5 m from Spitzer/IRS and additionally detect HS as well as an absorption feature at 8.7 m in both secondary eclipse observations. The excess absorption at 8.7 m can be explained by the presence of small (0.01 m) grains of SiO[s] in the uppermost layers of HD 189733 b's dayside atmosphere. This is the first direct detection of silicate clouds in HD 189733 b's atmosphere, and the…
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