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Horizontal and vertical exoplanet thermal structure from a JWST spectroscopic eclipse map

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posted on 2025-11-20, 15:11 authored by RC Challener, M Weiner Mansfield, PE Cubillos, AAA Piette, LP Coulombe, H Beltz, J Blecic, E Rauscher, JL Bean, B Benneke, EMR Kempton, J Harrington, TD Komacek, V Parmentier, Sarah CasewellSarah Casewell, N Iro, L Mancini, MC Nixon, M Radica, ME Steinrueck, L Welbanks, NM Batalha, C Caceres, IJM Crossfield, N Crouzet, JM Désert, K Molaverdikhani, NK Nikolov, E Palle, BV Rackham, E Schlawin, DK Sing, KB Stevenson, X Tan, JD Turner, X Zhang
Highly irradiated giant exoplanets known ‘ultrahot Jupiters’ are anticipated to exhibit large variations of atmospheric temperature and chemistry as a function of longitude, latitude and altitude. Previous observations have hinted at these variations, but the existing data have been fundamentally restricted to probing hemisphere-integrated spectra, thereby providing only coarse information on atmospheric gradients. Here we present a spectroscopic eclipse map of an extrasolar planet, resolving the atmosphere in multiple dimensions simultaneously. We analyse a secondary eclipse of the ultrahot Jupiter WASP-18b observed with the Near Infrared Imager and Slitless Spectrograph instrument on the JWST. The mapping reveals weaker longitudinal temperature gradients than were predicted by theoretical models, indicating the importance of hydrogen dissociation and/or nightside clouds in shaping global thermal emission. In addition, we identify two thermally distinct regions of the planet’s atmosphere: a ‘hotspot’ surrounding the substellar point and a ‘ring’ near the dayside limbs. The hotspot region shows a strongly inverted thermal structure due to the presence of optical absorbers and a water abundance marginally lower than the hemispheric average, in accordance with theoretical predictions. The ring region shows colder temperatures and poorly constrained chemical abundances. Similar future analyses will reveal the three-dimensional thermal, chemical and dynamical properties of a broad range of exoplanet atmospheres.<p></p>

History

Author affiliation

University of Leicester College of Science & Engineering Physics & Astronomy

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Nature Astronomy

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

eissn

2397-3366

Copyright date

2025

Available date

2025-11-20

Language

en

Deposited by

Dr Sarah Casewell

Deposit date

2025-11-14

Data Access Statement

The data used in this work are publicly available in the Mikulski Archive for Space Telescopes (https://archive.stsci.edu/). The data that was used to create all of the figures in this paper are freely available on Zenodo71.

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