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The Broadband Transmission Spectrum of WASP-39b from JWST NIRSpec PRISM Observations

Authors :
Zafar Rustamkulov
David Sing
Michael Line
E. May
Everett Schlawin
Kevin Stevenson
Jayesh Goyal
Sagnick Mukherjee
Sarah Moran
Hannah Wakeford
Joshua Lothringer
Aarynn Carter
Ryan MacDonald
Nestor Espinoza
Mercedes López-Morales
Jacob Bean
Caroline Piaulet
Quentin Changeat
Natalie Batalha
L. Kreidberg
Pierre-Alexis Roy
Nikolay Nikolov
Natasha Batalha
Peter Wheatley
Karan Molaverdikhani
Viven Parmentier
Björn Benneke
Jeremy Leconte
Jake Taylor
Neale Gibson
William Waalkes
Yamila Miguel
Jean-Michel Désert
Patricio Cubillos
Nicolas Iro
Tansu Daylan
Eva-Maria Ahrer
Amy Louca
Jacob Lustig-Yaeger
RENYU HU
Luis Welbanks
Jasmina Blecic
Benjamin Rackham
Michael Radica
Peter Gao
Giuseppe Morello
Enric Palle
Olivia Venot
Xi Zhang
Natalie Allen
Eliza Kempton
Katy Chubb
Jonathan Fortney
Pascal Tremblin
Taylor Bell
Thomas Mikal-Evans
Megan Mansfield
Ian Crossfield
Keshav Aggarwal
Joseph Harrington
Sarah Casewell
Monika Lendl
Agnibha Banerjee
Seth Redfield
Joanna Barstow
Adina Feinstein
Sebastian Zieba
Jake Turner
Kevin Heng
Munazza Alam
Lili Alderson
Evgenya Shkolnik
Diana Powell
Lakeisha Ramos-Rosado
Dominique Petit dit de la Roche
John Southworth
Saugata Barat
Luigi Mancini
Tiffany Kataria
Kazumasa Ohno
Nathan Mayne
Yucian Hong
Laura Rogers
Jorge Lillo-box
Johanna Teske
David Barrado
Gregory Tucker
Eric Agol
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Research Square Platform LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Transmission spectroscopy of exoplanets has revealed signatures of water vapor, aerosols, and alkali metals in a few dozen exoplanet atmospheres. However, these previous inferences with the Hubble and Spitzer Space Telescopes were hindered by the observations’ relatively narrow wavelength range and spectral resolving power, which precluded the unambiguous identification of other chemical species—in particular the primary carbon-bearing molecules. Here we report a broad-wavelength 0.5–5.5 μm atmospheric transmission spectrum of WASP-39 b, a 1200 K, roughly Saturn-mass, Jupiter-radius exoplanet, measured with JWST NIRSpec’s PRISM mode as part of the JWST Transiting Exoplanet Community Early Release Science Team program. We robustly detect multiple chemical species at high significance, including Na (19σ), H2O (33σ), CO2 (28σ), and CO (7σ). The non-detection of CH4, combined with a strong CO2 feature, favours atmospheric models with a super-Solar atmospheric metallicity. An unanticipated absorption feature at 4μm is best explained by SO2 (2.7σ), which could be a tracer of atmospheric photochemistry. These observations demonstrate JWST’s sensitivity to a rich diversity of exoplanet compositions and chemical processes.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........92ae022bc89f7cd230c45d13910c3ac3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-2092302/v1