The impact of organic hazes and graphite on the observation of CO2-rich sub-Neptune atmospheres
Haixin Li, Chao He, Sai Wang, Zhengbo Yang, Yu Liu, Yingjian Wang, Xiao'ou Luo, Sarah E. Moran, Cara Pesciotta, Sarah M. H\"orst, Julianne I. Moses, and V\'eronique Vuitton

TL;DR
This study provides new optical data for organic hazes and graphite in CO2-rich exoplanet atmospheres, demonstrating how hazes can explain observed spectral features and aiding interpretation of sub-Neptune atmospheres.
Contribution
It offers the first optical constants dataset for organic haze analogues in CO2 atmospheres and integrates these into models to interpret exoplanet transit spectra.
Findings
Organic hazes produce characteristic absorption features in spectra.
Haze models match observed spectral trends of GJ 1214b.
Graphite models result in flat spectra, affecting radius estimates.
Abstract
Many sub-Neptune and super-Earth exoplanets are expected to develop metal-enriched atmospheres due to atmospheric loss processes such as photoevaporation or core-powered mass loss. Thermochemical equilibrium calculations predict that at high metallicity and a temperature range of 300-700 K, CO2 becomes the dominant carbon species, and graphite may be the thermodynamically favored condensate under low-pressure conditions. Building on prior laboratory findings that such environments yield organic haze rather than graphite, we measured the transmittance spectra of organic haze analogues and graphite samples, and computed their optical constants across the measured wavelength range from 0.4 to 25 {\mu}m. The organic haze exhibits strong vibrational absorption bands, notably at 3.0, 4.5, and 6.0 {\mu}m, while graphite shows featureless broadband absorption. The derived optical constants of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science
