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A benchmark JWST near-infrared spectrum for the exoplanet WASP-39 b

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posted on 2024-09-30, 12:08 authored by AL Carter, EM May, N Espinoza, L Welbanks, E Ahrer, L Alderson, R Brahm, AD Feinstein, D Grant, M Line, G Morello, R O’Steen, M Radica, Z Rustamkulov, KB Stevenson, JD Turner, MK Alam, DR Anderson, NM Batalha, MP Battley, D Bayliss, JL Bean, B Benneke, ZK Berta-Thompson, J Brande, EM Bryant, MR Burleigh, L Coulombe, IJM Crossfield, M Damiano, J-M Désert, L Flagg, S Gill, J Inglis, J Kirk, H Knutson, L Kreidberg, M López Morales, M Mansfield, SE Moran, CA Murray, MC Nixon, DJM Petit dit de la Roche, BV Rackham, E Schlawin, DK Sing, HR Wakeford, NL Wallack, PJ Wheatley, S Zieba, K Aggarwal, JK Barstow, TJ Bell, J Blecic, C Caceres, N Crouzet, PE Cubillos, T Daylan, M de Val-Borro, L Decin, JJ Fortney, NP Gibson, K Heng, R Hu, EM-R Kempton, P Lagage, JD Lothringer, J Lustig-Yaeger, L Mancini, NJ Mayne, LC Mayorga, K Molaverdikhani, E Nasedkin, K Ohno, V Parmentier, D Powell, S Redfield, P Roy, J Taylor, X Zhang

Observing exoplanets through transmission spectroscopy supplies detailed information about their atmospheric composition, physics and chemistry. Before the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), these observations were limited to a narrow wavelength range across the near-ultraviolet to near-infrared, alongside broadband photometry at longer wavelengths. To understand more complex properties of exoplanet atmospheres, improved wavelength coverage and resolution are necessary to robustly quantify the influence of a broader range of absorbing molecular species. Here we present a combined analysis of JWST transmission spectroscopy across four different instrumental modes spanning 0.5–5.2 μm using Early Release Science observations of the Saturn-mass exoplanet WASP-39 b. Our uniform analysis constrains the orbital and stellar parameters within subpercentage precision, including matching the precision obtained by the most precise asteroseismology measurements of stellar density to date, and it further confirms the presence of Na, K, H2O, CO, CO2 and SO2 as atmospheric absorbers. Through this process, we have improved the agreement between the transmission spectra of all modes, except for the NIRSpec PRISM, which is affected by partial saturation of the detector. This work provides strong evidence that uniform light curve analysis is an important aspect to ensuring reliability when comparing the high-precision transmission spectra provided by JWST.

History

Author affiliation

College of Science & Engineering Physics & Astronomy

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Nature Astronomy

Volume

8

Issue

8

Pagination

1008 - 1019

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

issn

2397-3366

eissn

2397-3366

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2024-09-30

Language

en

Deposited by

Dr Matthew Burleigh

Deposit date

2024-09-13

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