University of Leicester
Browse

SO2, silicate clouds, but no CH4 detected in a warm Neptune

Download (19.39 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-02-16, 11:51 authored by A Dyrek, M Min, L Decin, J Bouwman, N Crouzet, P Mollière, PO Lagage, T Konings, P Tremblin, M Güdel, John PyeJohn Pye, R Waters, T Henning, B Vandenbussche, F Ardevol Martinez, I Argyriou, E Ducrot, L Heinke, G van Looveren, O Absil, D Barrado, P Baudoz, A Boccaletti, C Cossou, A Coulais, B Edwards, R Gastaud, A Glasse, A Glauser, TP Greene, S Kendrew, O Krause, F Lahuis, M Mueller, G Olofsson, P Patapis, D Rouan, P Royer, S Scheithauer, I Waldmann, N Whiteford, L Colina, EF van Dishoeck, G Östlin, TP Ray, G Wright

WASP-107b is a warm (approximately 740 K) transiting planet with a Neptune-like mass of roughly 30.5 M ⊕ and Jupiter-like radius of about 0.94 R J (refs. 1,2), whose extended atmosphere is eroding 3. Previous observations showed evidence for water vapour and a thick, high-altitude condensate layer in the atmosphere of WASP-107b (refs. 4,5). Recently, photochemically produced sulfur dioxide (SO2) was detected in the atmosphere of a hot (about 1,200 K) Saturn-mass planet from transmission spectroscopy near 4.05 μm (refs. 6,7), but for temperatures below about 1,000 K, sulfur is predicted to preferably form sulfur allotropes instead of SO2 (refs. 8–10). Here we report the 9σ detection of two fundamental vibration bands of SO2, at 7.35 μm and 8.69 μm, in the transmission spectrum of WASP-107b using the Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI) of JWST. This discovery establishes WASP-107b as the second irradiated exoplanet with confirmed photochemistry, extending the temperature range of exoplanets exhibiting detected photochemistry from about 1,200 K down to about 740 K. Furthermore, our spectral analysis reveals the presence of silicate clouds, which are strongly favoured (around 7σ) over simpler cloud set-ups. Furthermore, water is detected (around 12σ) but methane is not. These findings provide evidence of disequilibrium chemistry and indicate a dynamically active atmosphere with a super-solar metallicity.

History

Author affiliation

College of Science & Engineering/Physics & Astronomy

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Nature

Volume

625

Issue

7993

Pagination

51 - 54

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

issn

0028-0836

eissn

1476-4687

Copyright date

2023

Available date

2024-02-16

Spatial coverage

England

Language

eng

Deposited by

Dr John Pye

Deposit date

2024-02-14

Usage metrics

    University of Leicester Publications

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC