Quantifying thermal water dissociation in the dayside photosphere of WASP-121 b using NIRPS
Luc Bazinet, Romain Allart, Bj\"orn Benneke, Stefan Pelletier, Joost P. Wardenier, Neil J. Cook, Thierry Forveille, Louise D. Nielsen, Khaled Al Moulla, \'Etienne Artigau, Fr\'ed\'erique Baron, Susana C. C. Barros, Xavier Bonfils, Fran\c{c}ois Bouchy, Marta Bryan

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution spectroscopy to detect water and its dissociation product hydroxyl in the atmosphere of ultra-hot Jupiter WASP-121 b, confirming chemical equilibrium predictions and revealing complex atmospheric chemistry.
Contribution
First simultaneous detection of H₂O and OH in an ultra-hot Jupiter's atmosphere using NIRPS, validating chemical models and exploring atmospheric dynamics.
Findings
Detection of H₂O and OH confirms thermal dissociation predictions.
Observed velocity shift in H₂O signal suggests complex atmospheric dynamics.
Evidence of Fe and Mg indicates presence of refractory elements.
Abstract
The intense stellar irradiation of ultra-hot Jupiters results in some of the most extreme atmospheric environments in the planetary regime. On their daysides, temperatures can be sufficiently high for key atmospheric constituents to thermally dissociate into simpler molecular species and atoms. This dissociation drastically changes the atmospheric opacities and, in turn, critically alters the temperature structure, atmospheric dynamics, and day-night heat transport. To this date, however, simultaneous detections of the dissociating species and their thermally dissociation products in exoplanet atmospheres have remained rare. Here we present the simultaneous detections of HO and its thermally dissociation product OH on the dayside of the ultra-hot Jupiter WASP-121 b based on high-resolution emission spectroscopy with the recently commissioned Near InfraRed Planet Searcher (NIRPS). We…
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