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Nightside clouds and disequilibrium chemistry on the hot Jupiter WASP-43b

Authors :
Bell, Taylor J.
Crouzet, Nicolas
Cubillos, Patricio E.
Kreidberg, Laura
Piette, Anjali A. A.
Roman, Michael T.
Barstow, Joanna K.
Blecic, Jasmina
Carone, Ludmila
Coulombe, Louis-Philippe
Ducrot, Elsa
Hammond, Mark
Mendonça, João M.
Moses, Julianne I.
Parmentier, Vivien
Stevenson, Kevin B.
Teinturier, Lucas
Zhang, Michael
Batalha, Natalie M.
Bean, Jacob L.
Benneke, Björn
Charnay, Benjamin
Chubb, Katy L.
Demory, Brice-Olivier
Gao, Peter
Lee, Elspeth K. H.
López-Morales, Mercedes
Morello, Giuseppe
Rauscher, Emily
Sing, David K.
Tan, Xianyu
Venot, Olivia
Wakeford, Hannah R.
Aggarwal, Keshav
Ahrer, Eva-Maria
Alam, Munazza K.
Baeyens, Robin
Barrado, David
Caceres, Claudio
Carter, Aarynn L.
Casewell, Sarah L.
Challener, Ryan C.
Crossfield, Ian J. M.
Decin, Leen
Désert, Jean-Michel
Dobbs-Dixon, Ian
Dyrek, Achrène
Espinoza, Néstor
Feinstein, Adina D.
Gibson, Neale P.
Harrington, Joseph
Helling, Christiane
Hu, Renyu
Iro, Nicolas
Kempton, Eliza M. -R.
Kendrew, Sarah
Komacek, Thaddeus D.
Krick, Jessica
Lagage, Pierre-Olivier
Leconte, Jérémy
Lendl, Monika
Lewis, Neil T.
Lothringer, Joshua D.
Malsky, Isaac
Mancini, Luigi
Mansfield, Megan
Mayne, Nathan J.
Mikal-Evans, Thomas
Molaverdikhani, Karan
Nikolov, Nikolay K.
Nixon, Matthew C.
Palle, Enric
de la Roche, Dominique J. M. Petit dit
Piaulet, Caroline
Powell, Diana
Rackham, Benjamin V.
Schneider, Aaron D.
Steinrueck, Maria E.
Taylor, Jake
Welbanks, Luis
Yurchenko, Sergei N.
Zhang, Xi
Zieba, Sebastian
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Hot Jupiters are among the best-studied exoplanets, but it is still poorly understood how their chemical composition and cloud properties vary with longitude. Theoretical models predict that clouds may condense on the nightside and that molecular abundances can be driven out of equilibrium by zonal winds. Here we report a phase-resolved emission spectrum of the hot Jupiter WASP-43b measured from 5-12 $\mu$m with JWST's Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI). The spectra reveal a large day-night temperature contrast (with average brightness temperatures of 1524$\pm$35 and 863$\pm$23 Kelvin, respectively) and evidence for water absorption at all orbital phases. Comparisons with three-dimensional atmospheric models show that both the phase curve shape and emission spectra strongly suggest the presence of nightside clouds which become optically thick to thermal emission at pressures greater than ~100 mbar. The dayside is consistent with a cloudless atmosphere above the mid-infrared photosphere. Contrary to expectations from equilibrium chemistry but consistent with disequilibrium kinetics models, methane is not detected on the nightside (2$\sigma$ upper limit of 1-6 parts per million, depending on model assumptions).<br />Comment: 61 pages, 13 figures, 4 tables. This preprint has been submitted to and accepted in principle for publication in Nature Astronomy without significant changes

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2401.13027
Document Type :
Working Paper