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Photochemically-produced SO$_2$ in the atmosphere of WASP-39b

Authors :
Tsai, Shang-Min
Lee, Elspeth K. H.
Powell, Diana
Gao, Peter
Zhang, Xi
Moses, Julianne
Hébrard, Eric
Venot, Olivia
Parmentier, Vivien
Jordan, Sean
Hu, Renyu
Alam, Munazza K.
Alderson, Lili
Batalha, Natalie M.
Bean, Jacob L.
Benneke, Björn
Bierson, Carver J.
Brady, Ryan P.
Carone, Ludmila
Carter, Aarynn L.
Chubb, Katy L.
Inglis, Julie
Leconte, Jérémy
Lopez-Morales, Mercedes
Miguel, Yamila
Molaverdikhani, Karan
Rustamkulov, Zafar
Sing, David K.
Stevenson, Kevin B.
Wakeford, Hannah R
Yang, Jeehyun
Aggarwal, Keshav
Baeyens, Robin
Barat, Saugata
Borro, Miguel de Val
Daylan, Tansu
Fortney, Jonathan J.
France, Kevin
Goyal, Jayesh M
Grant, David
Kirk, James
Kreidberg, Laura
Louca, Amy
Moran, Sarah E.
Mukherjee, Sagnick
Nasedkin, Evert
Ohno, Kazumasa
Rackham, Benjamin V.
Redfield, Seth
Taylor, Jake
Tremblin, Pascal
Visscher, Channon
Wallack, Nicole L.
Welbanks, Luis
Youngblood, Allison
Ahrer, Eva-Maria
Batalha, Natasha E.
Behr, Patrick
Berta-Thompson, Zachory K.
Blecic, Jasmina
Casewell, S. L.
Crossfield, Ian J. M.
Crouzet, Nicolas
Cubillos, Patricio E.
Decin, Leen
Désert, Jean-Michel
Feinstein, Adina D.
Gibson, Neale P.
Harrington, Joseph
Heng, Kevin
Henning, Thomas
Kempton, Eliza M. -R.
Krick, Jessica
Lagage, Pierre-Olivier
Lendl, Monika
Line, Michael
Lothringer, Joshua D.
Mansfield, Megan
Mayne, N. J.
Mikal-Evans, Thomas
Palle, Enric
Schlawin, Everett
Shorttle, Oliver
Wheatley, Peter J.
Yurchenko, Sergei N.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Photochemistry is a fundamental process of planetary atmospheres that regulates the atmospheric composition and stability. However, no unambiguous photochemical products have been detected in exoplanet atmospheres to date. Recent observations from the JWST Transiting Exoplanet Early Release Science Program found a spectral absorption feature at 4.05 $\mu$m arising from SO$_2$ in the atmosphere of WASP-39b. WASP-39b is a 1.27-Jupiter-radii, Saturn-mass (0.28 M$_J$) gas giant exoplanet orbiting a Sun-like star with an equilibrium temperature of $\sim$1100 K. The most plausible way of generating SO$_2$ in such an atmosphere is through photochemical processes. Here we show that the SO$_2$ distribution computed by a suite of photochemical models robustly explains the 4.05 $\mu$m spectral feature identified by JWST transmission observations with NIRSpec PRISM (2.7$\sigma$) and G395H (4.5$\sigma$). SO$_2$ is produced by successive oxidation of sulphur radicals freed when hydrogen sulphide (H$_2$S) is destroyed. The sensitivity of the SO$_2$ 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 $\sim$10$\times$ solar. We further point out that SO$_2$ also shows observable features at ultraviolet and thermal infrared wavelengths not available from the existing observations.<br />Comment: 39 pages, 14 figures, accepted to be published in Nature

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2211.10490
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-023-05902-2