Hydride ion continuum hides absorption signatures in the NIRPS near-infrared transmission spectrum of the ultra-hot gas giant WASP-189b
Valentina Vaulato, Stefan Pelletier, David Ehrenreich, Romain Allart, Eduardo Cristo, Michal Steiner, Xavier Dumusque, Hritam Chakraborty, Monika Lendl, Avidaan Srivastava, \'Etienne Artigau, Fr\'ed\'erique Baron, C. Susana Barros, Bj\"orn Benneke, Xavier Bonfils

TL;DR
This study investigates how hydride ions (H$^-$) affect the near-infrared transmission spectrum of the ultra-hot gas giant WASP-189b, revealing that H$^-$ continuum opacity can obscure metal absorption features and influence atmospheric composition estimates.
Contribution
It provides the first joint optical and near-infrared analysis of WASP-189b, highlighting the significant role of H$^-$ in shaping transmission spectra and constraining atmospheric abundances.
Findings
H$^-$ continuum opacity dampens metal absorption signatures.
The hydride-to-Fe ratio exceeds equilibrium predictions by ~0.5 dex.
Including NIRPS data constrains H$^-$ abundance and electron density.
Abstract
Ultra-hot Jupiters showcase extreme atmospheric conditions, including molecular dissociation, ionisation, and significant day-to-night temperature contrasts. Their close proximity to host stars subjects them to intense stellar irradiation, driving high temperatures where hydride ions (H) significantly contribute to opacity, potentially obscuring metal features in near-infrared transmission spectra. We investigate the atmosphere of WASP-189b, targeting atomic, ionic, and molecular species (H, He, Fe, Ti, V, Mn, Na, Mg, Ca, Cr, Ni, Y, Ba, Sc, Fe, Ti, TiO, HO, CO, and OH), focusing on (i) the role of H as a source of continuum opacity, and (ii) the relative hydride-to-Fe abundance using joint optical and near-infrared data. We present two transits of WASP-189b gathered simultaneously in the optical with HARPS and near-infrared with NIRPS, supported by photometric light…
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