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A sub-Neptune exoplanet with a low-metallicity methane-depleted atmosphere and Mie-scattering clouds

Authors :
Joshua D. Lothringer
Heather A. Knutson
Jonathan J. Fortney
Diana Dragomir
Eliza M.-R. Kempton
Caroline V. Morley
Ian Wong
Björn Benneke
Benjamin J. Fulton
Joshua A. Kammer
Peter R. McCullough
Ronald L. Gilliland
Drake Deming
Laura Kreidberg
Julianne I. Moses
Jean-Michel Desert
Andrew W. Howard
Ian J. M. Crossfield
Source :
Nature Astronomy. 3:813-821
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2019.

Abstract

With no analogues in the Solar System, the discovery of thousands of exoplanets with masses and radii intermediate between Earth and Neptune was one of the big surprises of exoplanet science. These super-Earths and sub-Neptunes likely represent the most common outcome of planet formation. Mass and radius measurements indicate a diversity in bulk composition much wider than for gas giants; however, direct spectroscopic detections of molecular absorption and constraints on the gas mixing ratios have largely remained limited to planets more massive than Neptune. Here, we analyze a combined Hubble/Spitzer Space Telescope dataset of 12 transits and 20 eclipses of the sub-Neptune GJ 3470 b, whose mass of 12.6 $M_\oplus$ places it near the half-way point between previously studied exo-Neptunes (22-23 $M_\oplus$) and exoplanets known to have rocky densities (7 $M_\oplus$). Obtained over many years, our data set provides a robust detection of water absorption (>5$\sigma$) and a thermal emission detection from the lowest irradiated planet to date. We reveal a low-metallicity, hydrogen-dominated atmosphere similar to a gas giant, but strongly depleted in methane gas. The low, near-solar metallicity (O/H=0.2-18) sets important constraints on the potential planet formation processes at low masses as well as the subsequent accretion of solids. The low methane abundance indicates that methane is destroyed much more efficiently than previously predicted, suggesting that the CH$_4$/CO transition curve has to be revisited for close-in planets. Finally, we also find a sharp drop in the cloud opacity at 2-3 $\mu$m characteristic of Mie scattering, which enables narrow constraints on the cloud particle size and makes GJ 3470b a keystone target for mid-IR characterization with JWST.<br />Comment: Published in Nature Astronomy (July 1, 2019)

Details

ISSN :
23973366
Volume :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Astronomy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9cc2e5248484ba6e45d7d4edc1a6096e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41550-019-0800-5