Photochemical Hazes in Exoplanetary Skies with Diamonds: Microphysical Modeling of Haze Composition Evolution via Chemical Vapor Deposition
Kazumasa Ohno

TL;DR
This paper proposes that diamond formation via chemical vapor deposition (CVD) could be a dominant process in exoplanetary hazes, especially at certain temperatures and metallicities, with observable spectral signatures.
Contribution
It introduces a novel hypothesis that CVD diamonds form in exoplanet atmospheres, supported by microphysical modeling and spectral predictions, expanding understanding of haze composition.
Findings
CVD diamond growth dominates over soot in many planetary conditions.
Diamond hazes are most efficient at around 1000 K and low metallicity.
Spectral features of diamond hazes include a 3.53 μm hydrogenated diamond signature.
Abstract
Observational efforts in the last decade suggest the prevalence of photochemical hazes in exoplanetary atmospheres. Recent JWST observations raise growing evidence that exoplanetary hazes tend to have reflective compositions, unlike the conventionally assumed haze analogs, such as tholin and soot. In this study, I propose a novel hypothesis: diamond formation through chemical vapor deposition (CVD) may be happening in exoplanetary atmospheres. Using an aerosol microphysical model combined with the theory of CVD diamond and soot formation established in the industry community, I study how the haze composition evolves in exoplanetary atmospheres for various planetary equilibrium temperature, atmospheric metallicity, and C/O ratio. I find that CVD diamond growth dominates over soot growth in a wide range of planetary parameters. Diamond haze formation is most efficient at $T_{\rm…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Space Exploration and Technology
