111 results on '"Tsai, Shang-min"'
Search Results
102. HELIOS: AN OPEN-SOURCE, GPU-ACCELERATED RADIATIVE TRANSFER CODE FOR SELF-CONSISTENT EXOPLANETARY ATMOSPHERES
- Author
-
Malik, Matej, primary, Grosheintz, Luc, additional, Mendonça, João M., additional, Grimm, Simon L., additional, Lavie, Baptiste, additional, Kitzmann, Daniel, additional, Tsai, Shang-Min, additional, Burrows, Adam, additional, Kreidberg, Laura, additional, Bedell, Megan, additional, Bean, Jacob L., additional, Stevenson, Kevin B., additional, and Heng, Kevin, additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
103. ANALYTICAL MODELS OF EXOPLANETARY ATMOSPHERES. III. GASEOUS C–H–O–N CHEMISTRY WITH NINE MOLECULES
- Author
-
Heng, Kevin, primary and Tsai, Shang-Min, additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
104. ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY FOR ASTROPHYSICISTS: A SELF-CONSISTENT FORMALISM AND ANALYTICAL SOLUTIONS FOR ARBITRARY C/O
- Author
-
Heng, Kevin, primary, Lyons, James R., additional, and Tsai, Shang-Min, additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
105. THREE-DIMENSIONAL STRUCTURES OF EQUATORIAL WAVES AND THE RESULTING SUPER-ROTATION IN THE ATMOSPHERE OF A TIDALLY LOCKED HOT JUPITER
- Author
-
Tsai, Shang-Min, primary, Dobbs-Dixon, Ian, additional, and Gu, Pin-Gao, additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
106. Self-luminous and Irradiated Exoplanetary Atmospheres Explored with HELIOS
- Author
-
Malik, Matej, Kitzmann, Daniel, Mendonça, João M., Grimm, Simon L., Marleau, Gabriel-Dominique, Linder, Esther F., Tsai, Shang-Min, and Heng, Kevin
- Subjects
13. Climate action ,530 Physics ,520 Astronomy ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,500 Science - Abstract
We present new methodological features and physical ingredients included in the 1D radiative transfer code HELIOS, improving the hemispheric two-stream formalism. We conduct a thorough intercomparison survey with several established forward models, including COOLTLUSTY, PHOENIX, and find satisfactory consistency with their results. Then, we explore the impact of (i) different groups of opacity sources, (ii) a stellar path length adjustment, and (iii) a scattering correction on self-consistently calculated atmospheric temperatures and planetary emission spectra. First, we observe that temperature-pressure (T-P) profiles are very sensitive to the opacities included, with metal oxides, hydrides, the alkali atoms (and ionized hydrogen) playing an important role for the absorption of shortwave radiation (in very hot surroundings). Moreover, if these species are sufficiently abundant, they are likely to induce non-monotonic T-P profiles. Second, without the stellar path length adjustment, the incoming stellar flux is significantly underestimated for zenith angles above 80°, which somewhat affects the upper atmospheric temperatures and the planetary emission. Third, the scattering correction improves the accuracy of the computation of the reflected stellar light by ~10%. We use HELIOS to calculate a grid of cloud-free atmospheres in radiative-convective equilibrium for self-luminous planets for a range of effective temperatures, surface gravities, metallicities, and C/O ratios, to be used by planetary evolution studies. Furthermore, we calculate dayside temperatures and secondary eclipse spectra for a sample of exoplanets for varying chemistry and heat redistribution. These results may be used to make predictions on the feasibility of atmospheric characterizations with future observations.
107. The Peculiar Atmospheric Chemistry of KELT-9b
- Author
-
Kitzmann, Daniel, Heng, Kevin, Rimmer, Paul B., Hoeijmakers, Jens, Tsai, Shang-Min, Malik, Matej, Lendl, Monika, Deitrick, Russell John, and Demory, Brice-Olivier
- Subjects
13. Climate action ,530 Physics ,520 Astronomy ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
The atmospheric temperatures of the ultra-hot Jupiter KELT-9b straddle the transition between gas giants and stars, and therefore between two traditionally distinct regimes of atmospheric chemistry. Previous theoretical studies assume the atmosphere of KELT-9b to be in chemical equilibrium. Despite the high ultraviolet flux from KELT-9, we show using photochemical kinetic calculations that the observable atmosphere of KELT-9b is predicted to be close to chemical equilibrium, which greatly simplifies any theoretical interpretation of its spectra. It also makes the atmosphere of KELT-9b, which is expected to be cloud-free, a tightly constrained chemical system that lends itself to a clean set of theoretical predictions. Due to the lower pressures probed in transmission (compared to emission) spectroscopy, we predict the abundance of water to vary by several orders of magnitude across the atmospheric limb depending on temperature, which makes water a sensitive thermometer. Carbon monoxide is predicted to be the dominant molecule under a wide range of scenarios, rendering it a robust diagnostic of the metallicity when analyzed in tandem with water. All of the other usual suspects (acetylene, ammonia, carbon dioxide, hydrogen cyanide, methane) are predicted to be subdominant at solar metallicity, while atomic oxygen, iron, and magnesium are predicted to have relative abundances as high as 1 part in 10,000. Neutral atomic iron is predicted to be seen through a forest of optical and near-infrared lines, which makes KELT-9b suitable for high-resolution ground-based spectroscopy with HARPS-N or CARMENES. We summarize future observational prospects of characterizing the atmosphere of KELT-9b.
108. Identification of carbon dioxide in an exoplanet atmosphere
- Author
-
Ahrer, Eva-Maria, Alderson, Lili, Batalha, Natalie M., Batalha, Natasha E., Bean, Jacob L., Beatty, Thomas G., Bell, Taylor J., Benneke, Björn, Berta-Thompson, Zachory K., Carter, Aarynn L., Crossfield, Ian J. M., Espinoza, Néstor, Feinstein, Adina D., Fortney, Jonathan J., Gibson, Neale P., Goyal, Jayesh M., Kempton, Eliza M.-R., Kirk, James, Kreidberg, Laura, López-Morales, Mercedes, Line, Michael R., Lothringer, Joshua D., Moran, Sarah E., Mukherjee, Sagnick, Ohno, Kazumasa, Parmentier, Vivien, Piaulet, Caroline, Rustamkulov, Zafar, Schlawin, Everett, Sing, David K., Stevenson, Kevin B., Wakeford, Hannah R., Allen, Natalie H., Birkmann, Stephan M., Brande, Jonathan, Crouzet, Nicolas, Cubillos, Patricio E., Damiano, Mario, Désert, Jean-Michel, Gao, Peter, Harrington, Joseph, Hu, Renyu, Kendrew, Sarah, Knutson, Heather A., Lagage, Pierre-Olivier, Leconte, Jérémy, Lendl, Monika, MacDonald, Ryan J., May, E. M., Miguel, Yamila, Molaverdikhani, Karan, Moses, Julianne I., Murray, Catriona Anne, Nehring, Molly, Nikolov, Nikolay K., Petit dit de la Roche, D. J. M., Radica, Michael, Roy, Pierre-Alexis, Stassun, Keivan G., Taylor, Jake, Waalkes, William C., Wachiraphan, Patcharapol, Welbanks, Luis, Wheatley, Peter J., Aggarwal, Keshav, Alam, Munazza K., Banerjee, Agnibha, Barstow, Joanna K., Blecic, Jasmina, Casewell, S. L., Changeat, Quentin, Chubb, K. L., Colón, Knicole D., Coulombe, Louis-Philippe, Daylan, Tansu, de Val-Borro, Miguel, Decin, Leen, Dos Santos, Leonardo A., Flagg, Laura, France, Kevin, Fu, Guangwei, García Muñoz, A., Gizis, John E., Glidden, Ana, Grant, David, Heng, Kevin, Henning, Thomas, Hong, Yu-Cian, Inglis, Julie, Iro, Nicolas, Kataria, Tiffany, Komacek, Thaddeus D., Krick, Jessica E., Lee, Elspeth K. H., Lewis, Nikole K., Lillo-Box, Jorge, Lustig-Yaeger, Jacob, Mancini, Luigi, Mandell, Avi M., Mansfield, Megan, Marley, Mark S., Mikal-Evans, Thomas, Morello, Giuseppe, Nixon, Matthew C., Ortiz Ceballos, Kevin, Piette, Anjali A. A., Powell, Diana, Rackham, Benjamin V., Ramos-Rosado, Lakeisha, Rauscher, Emily, Redfield, Seth, Rogers, Laura K., Roman, Michael T., Roudier, Gael M., Scarsdale, Nicholas, Shkolnik, Evgenya L., Southworth, John, Spake, Jessica J., Steinrueck, Maria E., Tan, Xianyu, Teske, Johanna K., Tremblin, Pascal, Tsai, Shang-Min, Tucker, Gregory S., Turner, Jake D., Valenti, Jeff A., Venot, Olivia, Waldmann, Ingo P., Wallack, Nicole L., Zhang, Xi, Zieba, Sebastian, Ahrer, Eva-Maria, Alderson, Lili, Batalha, Natalie M., Batalha, Natasha E., Bean, Jacob L., Beatty, Thomas G., Bell, Taylor J., Benneke, Björn, Berta-Thompson, Zachory K., Carter, Aarynn L., Crossfield, Ian J. M., Espinoza, Néstor, Feinstein, Adina D., Fortney, Jonathan J., Gibson, Neale P., Goyal, Jayesh M., Kempton, Eliza M.-R., Kirk, James, Kreidberg, Laura, López-Morales, Mercedes, Line, Michael R., Lothringer, Joshua D., Moran, Sarah E., Mukherjee, Sagnick, Ohno, Kazumasa, Parmentier, Vivien, Piaulet, Caroline, Rustamkulov, Zafar, Schlawin, Everett, Sing, David K., Stevenson, Kevin B., Wakeford, Hannah R., Allen, Natalie H., Birkmann, Stephan M., Brande, Jonathan, Crouzet, Nicolas, Cubillos, Patricio E., Damiano, Mario, Désert, Jean-Michel, Gao, Peter, Harrington, Joseph, Hu, Renyu, Kendrew, Sarah, Knutson, Heather A., Lagage, Pierre-Olivier, Leconte, Jérémy, Lendl, Monika, MacDonald, Ryan J., May, E. M., Miguel, Yamila, Molaverdikhani, Karan, Moses, Julianne I., Murray, Catriona Anne, Nehring, Molly, Nikolov, Nikolay K., Petit dit de la Roche, D. J. M., Radica, Michael, Roy, Pierre-Alexis, Stassun, Keivan G., Taylor, Jake, Waalkes, William C., Wachiraphan, Patcharapol, Welbanks, Luis, Wheatley, Peter J., Aggarwal, Keshav, Alam, Munazza K., Banerjee, Agnibha, Barstow, Joanna K., Blecic, Jasmina, Casewell, S. L., Changeat, Quentin, Chubb, K. L., Colón, Knicole D., Coulombe, Louis-Philippe, Daylan, Tansu, de Val-Borro, Miguel, Decin, Leen, Dos Santos, Leonardo A., Flagg, Laura, France, Kevin, Fu, Guangwei, García Muñoz, A., Gizis, John E., Glidden, Ana, Grant, David, Heng, Kevin, Henning, Thomas, Hong, Yu-Cian, Inglis, Julie, Iro, Nicolas, Kataria, Tiffany, Komacek, Thaddeus D., Krick, Jessica E., Lee, Elspeth K. H., Lewis, Nikole K., Lillo-Box, Jorge, Lustig-Yaeger, Jacob, Mancini, Luigi, Mandell, Avi M., Mansfield, Megan, Marley, Mark S., Mikal-Evans, Thomas, Morello, Giuseppe, Nixon, Matthew C., Ortiz Ceballos, Kevin, Piette, Anjali A. A., Powell, Diana, Rackham, Benjamin V., Ramos-Rosado, Lakeisha, Rauscher, Emily, Redfield, Seth, Rogers, Laura K., Roman, Michael T., Roudier, Gael M., Scarsdale, Nicholas, Shkolnik, Evgenya L., Southworth, John, Spake, Jessica J., Steinrueck, Maria E., Tan, Xianyu, Teske, Johanna K., Tremblin, Pascal, Tsai, Shang-Min, Tucker, Gregory S., Turner, Jake D., Valenti, Jeff A., Venot, Olivia, Waldmann, Ingo P., Wallack, Nicole L., Zhang, Xi, and Zieba, Sebastian
- Abstract
Carbon dioxide (CO2) is a key chemical species that is found in a wide range of planetary atmospheres. In the context of exoplanets, CO2 is an indicator of the metal enrichment (that is, elements heavier than helium, also called ‘metallicity’), and thus the formation processes of the primary atmospheres of hot gas giants. It is also one of the most promising species to detect in the secondary atmospheres of terrestrial exoplanets. Previous photometric measurements of transiting planets with the Spitzer Space Telescope have given hints of the presence of CO2, but have not yielded definitive detections owing to the lack of unambiguous spectroscopic identification. Here we present the detection of CO2 in the atmosphere of the gas giant exoplanet WASP-39b from transmission spectroscopy observations obtained with JWST as part of the Early Release Science programme. The data used in this study span 3.0–5.5 micrometres in wavelength and show a prominent CO2 absorption feature at 4.3 micrometres (26-sigma significance). The overall spectrum is well matched by one-dimensional, ten-times solar metallicity models that assume radiative–convective–thermochemical equilibrium and have moderate cloud opacity. These models predict that the atmosphere should have water, carbon monoxide and hydrogen sulfide in addition to CO2, but little methane. Furthermore, we also tentatively detect a small absorption feature near 4.0 micrometres that is not reproduced by these models.
109. A mini-chemical scheme with net reactions for 3D general circulation models
- Author
-
Tsai, Shang-Min, Lee, Elspeth K. H., and Pierrehumbert, Raymond
- Subjects
530 Physics ,520 Astronomy ,500 Science - Abstract
Context. Growing evidence has indicated that the global composition distribution plays an indisputable role in interpreting observational data. Three-dimensional general circulation models (GCMs) with a reliable treatment of chemistry and clouds are particularly crucial in preparing for upcoming observations. In attempts to achieve 3D chemistry-climate modeling, the challenge mainly lies in the expensive computing power required for treating a large number of chemical species and reactions. Aims. Motivated by the need for a robust and computationally efficient chemical scheme, we devise a mini-chemical network with a minimal number of species and reactions for H2-dominated atmospheres. Methods. We apply a novel technique to simplify the chemical network from a full kinetics model, VULCAN, by replacing a large number of intermediate reactions with net reactions. The number of chemical species is cut down from 67 to 12, with the major species of thermal and observational importance retained, including H2O, CH4, CO, CO2, C2H2, NH3, and HCN. The size of the total reactions is also greatly reduced, from ~800 to 20. We validated the mini-chemical scheme by verifying the temporal evolution and benchmarking the predicted compositions in four exoplanet atmospheres (GJ 1214b, GJ 436b, HD 189733b, and HD 209458b) against the full kinetics of VULCAN. Results. The mini-network reproduces the chemical timescales and composition distributions of the full kinetics well within an order of magnitude for the major species in the pressure range of 1 bar–0.1 mbar across various metallicities and carbon-to-oxygen (C/O) ratios. Conclusions. We have developed and validated a mini-chemical scheme using net reactions to significantly simplify a large chemical network. The small scale of the mini-chemical scheme permits simple use and fast computation, which is optimal for implementation in a 3D GCM or a retrieval framework. We focus on the thermochemical kinetics of net reactions in this paper and address photochemistry in a follow-up paper.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
110. Inhomogeneous terminators on the exoplanet WASP-39 b.
- Author
-
Espinoza N, Steinrueck ME, Kirk J, MacDonald RJ, Savel AB, Arnold K, Kempton EM, Murphy MM, Carone L, Zamyatina M, Lewis DA, Samra D, Kiefer S, Rauscher E, Christie D, Mayne N, Helling C, Rustamkulov Z, Parmentier V, May EM, Carter AL, Zhang X, López-Morales M, Allen N, Blecic J, Decin L, Mancini L, Molaverdikhani K, Rackham BV, Palle E, Tsai SM, Ahrer EM, Bean JL, Crossfield IJM, Haegele D, Hébrard E, Kreidberg L, Powell D, Schneider AD, Welbanks L, Wheatley P, Brahm R, and Crouzet N
- Abstract
Transmission spectroscopy has been a workhorse technique used over the past two decades to constrain the physical and chemical properties of exoplanet atmospheres
1-5 . One of its classical key assumptions is that the portion of the atmosphere it probes-the terminator region-is homogeneous. Several works from the past decade, however, have put this into question for highly irradiated, hot (Teq ≳ 1,000 K) gas giant exoplanets, both empirically6-10 and through three-dimensional modelling11-17 . While models have predicted clear differences between the evening (day-to-night) and morning (night-to-day) terminators, direct morning and evening transmission spectra in a wide wavelength range have not been reported for an exoplanet so far. Under the assumption of precise and accurate orbital parameters for the exoplanet WASP-39 b, here we report the detection of inhomogeneous terminators on WASP-39 b, which has allowed us to retrieve its morning and evening transmission spectra in the near-infrared (2-5 μm) using the James Webb Space Telescope. We have observed larger transit depths in the evening, which are, on average, 405 ± 88 ppm larger than the morning ones, and also have qualitatively larger features than the morning spectrum. The spectra are best explained by models in which the evening terminator is hotter than the morning terminator by 17 7 - 57 + 65 K, with both terminators having C/O ratios consistent with solar. General circulation models predict temperature differences broadly consistent with the above value and point towards a cloudy morning terminator and a clearer evening terminator., (© 2024. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
111. Photochemically produced SO 2 in the atmosphere of WASP-39b.
- Author
-
Tsai SM, Lee EKH, Powell D, Gao P, Zhang X, Moses J, Hébrard E, Venot O, Parmentier V, Jordan S, Hu R, Alam MK, Alderson L, Batalha NM, Bean JL, Benneke B, Bierson CJ, Brady RP, Carone L, Carter AL, Chubb KL, Inglis J, Leconte J, Line M, López-Morales M, Miguel Y, Molaverdikhani K, Rustamkulov Z, Sing DK, Stevenson KB, Wakeford HR, Yang J, Aggarwal K, Baeyens R, Barat S, de Val-Borro M, Daylan T, Fortney JJ, France K, Goyal JM, Grant D, Kirk J, Kreidberg L, Louca A, Moran SE, Mukherjee S, Nasedkin E, Ohno K, Rackham BV, Redfield S, Taylor J, Tremblin P, Visscher C, Wallack NL, Welbanks L, Youngblood A, Ahrer EM, Batalha NE, Behr P, Berta-Thompson ZK, Blecic J, Casewell SL, Crossfield IJM, Crouzet N, Cubillos PE, Decin L, Désert JM, Feinstein AD, Gibson NP, Harrington J, Heng K, Henning T, Kempton EM, Krick J, Lagage PO, Lendl M, Lothringer JD, Mansfield M, Mayne NJ, Mikal-Evans T, Palle E, Schlawin E, Shorttle O, Wheatley PJ, and Yurchenko SN
- Abstract
Photochemistry is a fundamental process of planetary atmospheres that regulates the atmospheric composition and stability
1 . However, no unambiguous photochemical products have been detected in exoplanet atmospheres so far. Recent observations from the JWST Transiting Exoplanet Community Early Release Science Program2,3 found a spectral absorption feature at 4.05 μm arising from sulfur dioxide (SO2 ) in the atmosphere of WASP-39b. WASP-39b is a 1.27-Jupiter-radii, Saturn-mass (0.28 MJ ) gas giant exoplanet orbiting a Sun-like star with an equilibrium temperature of around 1,100 K (ref.4 ). The most plausible way of generating SO2 in such an atmosphere is through photochemical processes5,6 . Here we show that the SO2 distribution computed by a suite of photochemical models robustly explains the 4.05-μm spectral feature identified by JWST transmission observations7 with NIRSpec PRISM (2.7σ)8 and G395H (4.5σ)9 . SO2 is produced by successive oxidation of sulfur radicals freed when hydrogen sulfide (H2 S) is destroyed. The sensitivity of the SO2 feature to the enrichment of the atmosphere by heavy elements (metallicity) suggests that it can be used as a tracer of atmospheric properties, with WASP-39b exhibiting an inferred metallicity of about 10× solar. We further point out that SO2 also shows observable features at ultraviolet and thermal infrared wavelengths not available from the existing observations., (© 2023. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.