Imaging & Spectroscopy

Near-Infrared Transmission Spectroscopy of HAT-P-18b with NIRISS: Disentangling Planetary and Stellar Features in the Era of JWST

By Keith Cowing
Status Report
astro-ph.EP
October 24, 2023
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Near-Infrared Transmission Spectroscopy of HAT-P-18b with NIRISS: Disentangling Planetary and Stellar Features in the Era of JWST
Atmospheric and stellar retrieval results for HAT-P-18 b. Top: Retrieved model transmission spectra from our JWST/NIRISS spectra (black errors). For each of the three retrieval codes (Poseidon; purple, SCARLET; orange, and Aurora; blue), the median retrieved spectrum (solid lines) and 1 𝜎 confidence intervals (shaded contours) are shown. The most important model features required to explain HAT-P-18 b’s NIRISS transmission spectrum are annotated. All three codes adopt the one heterogeneity model for this comparison. Bottom: Posterior probability distributions corresponding to the retrieval model in the top panel. The top row shows retrieved atmospheric properties with constrained values, the middle row shows non-detected chemical species with abundance upper limits, and the bottom row shows the retrieved unocculted starspot properties. Each histogram is annotated with the retrieved median and ± 1 𝜎 confidence intervals from the Poseidon retrieval for reference (see Table 4 for the results from all three codes). — astro-ph.SR

The JWST Early Release Observations (ERO) included a NIRISS/SOSS (0.6-2.8μm) transit of the ∼850K Saturn-mass exoplanet HAT-P-18b. Initial analysis of these data reported detections of water, escaping helium, and haze.

The JWST Early Release Observations (ERO) included a NIRISS/SOSS (0.6-2.8μm) transit of the ∼850K Saturn-mass exoplanet HAT-P-18b. Initial analysis of these data reported detections of water, escaping helium, and haze.

However, active K dwarfs like HAT-P-18 possess surface heterogeneities − starspots and faculae − that can complicate the interpretation of transmission spectra, and indeed, a spot-crossing event is present in HAT-P-18b’s NIRISS/SOSS light curves. Here, we present an extensive reanalysis and interpretation of the JWST ERO transmission spectrum of HAT-P-18b, as well as HST/WFC3 and Spitzer/IRAC transit observations.

We detect H2O (12.5σ), CO2 (7.3σ), a cloud deck (7.4σ), and unocculted starspots (5.8σ), alongside hints of Na (2.7σ). We do not detect the previously reported CH4 (log CH4 < -6 to 2σ). We obtain excellent agreement between three independent retrieval codes, which find a sub-solar H2O abundance (log H2O ≈−4.4±0.3).

However, the inferred CO2 abundance (log CO2 ≈−4.8±0.4) is significantly super-solar and requires further investigation into its origin. We also introduce new stellar heterogeneity considerations by fitting for the active regions’ surface gravities − a proxy for the effects of magnetic pressure. Finally, we compare our JWST inferences to those from HST/WFC3 and Spitzer/IRAC.

Our results highlight the exceptional promise of simultaneous planetary atmosphere and stellar heterogeneity constraints in the era of JWST and demonstrate that JWST transmission spectra may warrant more complex treatments of the transit light source effect.

Marylou Fournier-Tondreau, Ryan J. MacDonald, Michael Radica, David Lafrenière, Luis Welbanks, Caroline Piaulet, Louis-Philippe Coulombe, Romain Allart, Kim Morel, Étienne Artigau, Loïc Albert, Olivia Lim, René Doyon, Björn Benneke, Jason F. Rowe, Antoine Darveau-Bernier, Nicolas B. Cowan, Nikole K. Lewis, Neil James Cook, Laura Flagg, Frédéric Genest, Stefan Pelletier, Doug Johnstone, Lisa Dang, Lisa Kaltenegger, Jake Taylor, Jake D. Turner

Subjects: Earth and Planetary Astrophysics (astro-ph.EP); Solar and Stellar Astrophysics (astro-ph.SR)
Cite as: arXiv:2310.14950 [astro-ph.EP] (or arXiv:2310.14950v1 [astro-ph.EP] for this version)
https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2310.14950
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Submission history
From: Marylou Fournier-Tondreau
[v1] Mon, 23 Oct 2023 13:51:10 UTC (6,095 KB)
https://arxiv.org/abs/2310.14950
Astrobiology

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