SIMBAD references

2011ApJ...727...65S - Astrophys. J., 727, 65 (2011/February-1)

Transmission spectra of transiting planet atmospheres: model validation and simulations of the hot Neptune GJ 436b for the james webb space telescope.

SHABRAM M., FORTNEY J.J., GREENE T.P. and FREEDMAN R.S.

Abstract (from CDS):

We explore the transmission spectrum of the Neptune-class exoplanet GJ 436b, including the possibility that its atmospheric opacity is dominated by a variety of nonequilibrium chemical products. We also validate our transmission code by demonstrating close agreement with analytic models that use only Rayleigh scattering or water vapor opacity. We find broad disagreement with radius variations predicted by another published model. For GJ 436b, the relative coolness of the planet's atmosphere, along with its implied high metallicity, may make it dissimilar in character compared to "hot Jupiters." Some recent observational and modeling efforts suggest low relative abundances of H2 O and CH4present in GJ 436b's atmosphere, compared to calculations from equilibrium chemistry. We include these characteristics in our models and examine the effects of absorption from methane-derived higher-order hydrocarbons. To our knowledge, the effects of these nonequilibrium chemical products on the spectra of close-in giant planets have not previously been investigated. Significant absorption from HCN and C2H2 is found throughout the infrared, while C2H4 and C2H6are less easily seen. We perform detailed simulations of James Webb Space Telescope observations, including all likely noise sources, and find that we will be able to constrain chemical abundance regimes from this planet's transmission spectrum. For instance, the width of the features at 1.5, 3.3, and 7 µm indicates the amount of HCN versus C2H2present. The NIRSpec prism mode will be useful due to its large spectral range and the relatively large number of photo-electrons recorded per spectral resolution element. However, extremely bright host stars like GJ 436 may be better observed with a higher spectroscopic resolution mode in order to avoid detector saturation. We find that observations with the MIRI low-resolution spectrograph should also have high signal-to-noise in the 5-10 µm range due to the brightness of the star and the relatively low spectral resolution (R ∼ 100) of this mode.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): planetary systems - radiative transfer - stars: individual (GJ 436, HD 209458)

Simbad objects: 6

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