scholarly journals The Near-infrared Transmission Spectra of TRAPPIST-1 Planets b, c, d, e, f, and g and Stellar Contamination in Multi-epoch Transit Spectra

2018 ◽  
Vol 156 (4) ◽  
pp. 178 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhanbo Zhang ◽  
Yifan Zhou ◽  
Benjamin V. Rackham ◽  
Dániel Apai
2018 ◽  
Vol 612 ◽  
pp. A53 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lorenzo Pino ◽  
David Ehrenreich ◽  
Aurélien Wyttenbach ◽  
Vincent Bourrier ◽  
Valerio Nascimbeni ◽  
...  

Space-borne low- to medium-resolution (ℛ ~ 102–103) and ground-based high-resolution spectrographs (ℛ ~ 105) are commonly used to obtain optical and near infrared transmission spectra of exoplanetary atmospheres. In this wavelength range, space-borne observations detect the broadest spectral features (alkali doublets, molecular bands, scattering, etc.), while high-resolution, ground-based observations probe the sharpest features (cores of the alkali lines, molecular lines). The two techniques differ by several aspects. (1) The line spread function of ground-based observations is ~103 times narrower than for space-borne observations; (2) Space-borne transmission spectra probe up to the base of thermosphere (P ≳ 10−6 bar), while ground-based observations can reach lower pressures (down to ~10−11 bar) thanks to their high resolution; (3) Space-borne observations directly yield the transit depth of the planet, while ground-based observations can only measure differences in the apparent size of the planet at different wavelengths. These differences make it challenging to combine both techniques. Here, we develop a robust method to compare theoretical models with observations at different resolutions. We introduce πη, a line-by-line 1D radiative transfer code to compute theoretical transmission spectra over a broad wavelength range at very high resolution (ℛ ~ 106, or Δλ ~ 0.01 Å). An hybrid forward modeling/retrieval optimization scheme is devised to deal with the large computational resources required by modeling a broad wavelength range ~0.3–2 μm at high resolution. We apply our technique to HD 189733b. In this planet, HST observations reveal a flattened spectrum due to scattering by aerosols, while high-resolution ground-based HARPS observations reveal sharp features corresponding to the cores of sodium lines. We reconcile these apparent contrasting results by building models that reproduce simultaneously both data sets, from the troposphere to the thermosphere. We confirm: (1) the presence of scattering by tropospheric aerosols; (2) that the sodium core feature is of thermospheric origin. When we take into account the presence of aerosols, the large contrast of the core of the sodium lines measured by HARPS indicates a temperature of up to ~10 000K in the thermosphere, higher than what reported in the literature. We also show that the precise value of the thermospheric temperature is degenerate with the relative optical depth of sodium, controlled by its abundance, and of the aerosol deck.


2015 ◽  
Vol 54 (11) ◽  
pp. 117101
Author(s):  
Daniel C. Aiken ◽  
Scott A. Ramsey ◽  
Troy B. Mayo ◽  
Samuel G. Lambrakos ◽  
Joseph Edward Peak

2013 ◽  
Vol 50 (5) ◽  
pp. 053003 ◽  
Author(s):  
赵杰文 Zhao Jiewen ◽  
毕夏坤 Bi Xiakun ◽  
林颢 Lin Hao ◽  
孙力 Sun Li ◽  
管彬彬 Guan Binbin

2015 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
pp. 123-132 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel C. Aiken ◽  
Scott Ramsey ◽  
Troy Mayo ◽  
James Bellemare ◽  
Samuel G. Lambrakos ◽  
...  

2000 ◽  
Vol 54 (2) ◽  
pp. 262-267 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Berdahl ◽  
L. H. Espinoza ◽  
D. Littlejohn ◽  
D. Lucas ◽  
D. L. Perry

Near-infrared transmission spectroscopy can be complicated by the light scattering from heterogeneous materials. For the examination of an evolving system exhibiting such light scattering, transmission spectra near wavenumber v = 104 cm−1 were obtained during the hydrolysis of FeCl3 solutions. At first, the resulting turbid suspension of cigar-shaped β-FeOOH particles exhibits single-particle scattering, including a Rayleigh regime (attenuation ∞ v4). At later times, the scattering increases strongly as the particles aggregate, and becomes proportional to vα, with α ≈ 2, consistent with scattering models that interpret the structure of aggregates in terms of a fractal dimension df roughly equal to 2. In all cases investigated, the attenuation due to scattering is spectrally smooth and increases monotonically with wavenumber. It can be written in the simple form vα with 1 ≤ α ≤ 4. While over limited spectral ranges α may be taken independent of v, over wide ranges it decreases with increasing v. This behavior is consistent with the theoretical limits of α = 4 at v = 0, and α = 0 at v = ∞. Overall, the results suggest that a useful form for simulating scattering backgrounds in near-infrared spectroscopy is Avα, with A and α fitted constants.


2020 ◽  
Vol 643 ◽  
pp. A64
Author(s):  
M. Oshagh ◽  
F. F. Bauer ◽  
M. Lafarga ◽  
K. Molaverdikhani ◽  
P. J. Amado ◽  
...  

Multiband photometric transit observations (spectro-photometric) have been used mostly so far to retrieve broadband transmission spectra of transiting exoplanets in order to study their atmospheres. An alternative method was proposed, and has only been used once, to recover broadband transmission spectra using chromatic Rossiter–McLaughlin observations. We use the chromatic Rossiter–McLaughlin technique on archival and new observational data obtained with the HARPS and CARMENES instruments to retrieve transmission spectra of HD 189733b. The combined results cover the widest retrieved broadband transmission spectrum of an exoplanet obtained from ground-based observation. Our retrieved spectrum in the visible wavelength range shows the signature of a hazy atmosphere, and also includes an indication for the presence of sodium and potassium. These findings all agree with previous studies. The combined visible and near-infrared transmission spectrum exhibits a strong steep slope that may have several origins, such as a super-Rayleigh slope in the atmosphere of HD 189733b, an unknown systematic instrumental offset between the visible and near-infrared, or a strong stellar activity contamination. The host star is indeed known to be very active and might easily generate spurious features in the retrieved transmission spectra. Using our CARMENES observations, we assessed this scenario and place an informative constraint on some properties of the active regions of HD 189733. We demonstrate that the presence of starspots on HD 189733 can easily explain our observed strong slope in the broadband transmission spectrum.


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