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INFRARED TRANSMISSION SPECTROSCOPY OF THE EXOPLANETS HD 209458b AND XO-1b USING THE WIDE FIELD CAMERA-3 ON THE HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE

TLDR
In this paper, the authors reported WFC3 spectroscopy of the giant planets HD 209458b and XO-1b in transit, using spatial scanning mode for maximum photon-collecting efficiency.
Abstract
Exoplanetary transmission spectroscopy in the near-infrared using the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) NICMOS is currently ambiguous because different observational groups claim different results from the same data, depending on their analysis methodologies. Spatial scanning with HST/WFC3 provides an opportunity to resolve this ambiguity. We here report WFC3 spectroscopy of the giant planets HD 209458b and XO-1b in transit, using spatial scanning mode for maximum photon-collecting efficiency. We introduce an analysis technique that derives the exoplanetary transmission spectrum without the necessity of explicitly decorrelating instrumental effects, and achieves nearly photon-limited precision even at the high flux levels collected in spatial scan mode. Our errors are within 6% (XO-1) and 26% (HD 209458b) of the photon-limit at a resolving power of λ/δλ ~ 70, and are better than 0.01% per spectral channel. Both planets exhibit water absorption of approximately 200 ppm at the water peak near 1.38 μm. Our result for XO-1b contradicts the much larger absorption derived from NICMOS spectroscopy. The weak water absorption we measure for HD 209458b is reminiscent of the weakness of sodium absorption in the first transmission spectroscopy of an exoplanet atmosphere by Charbonneau et al. Model atmospheres having uniformly distributed extra opacity of 0.012 cm2 g−1 account approximately for both our water measurement and the sodium absorption. Our results for HD 209458b support the picture advocated by Pont et al. in which weak molecular absorptions are superposed on a transmission spectrum that is dominated by continuous opacity due to haze and/or dust. However, the extra opacity needed for HD 209458b is grayer than for HD 189733b, with a weaker Rayleigh component.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Clouds in the atmosphere of the super-Earth exoplanet GJ 1214b

TL;DR: A measurement of the transmission spectrum of GJ 1214b at near-infrared wavelengths is reported, sufficiently precise to detect absorption features from a high mean-molecular-mass atmosphere and rule out cloud-free atmospheric models with compositions dominated by water, methane, carbon monoxide, nitrogen or carbon dioxide.
Journal ArticleDOI

Characterizing transiting exoplanet atmospheres with jwst

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore how well spectra from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) will likely constrain bulk atmospheric properties of transiting exoplanets.
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A featureless transmission spectrum for the Neptune-mass exoplanet GJ 436b

TL;DR: Observations of GJ 436b’s atmosphere obtained during transit indicate that the planet's transmission spectrum is featureless, ruling out cloud-free, hydrogen-dominated atmosphere models with an extremely high significance of 48σ.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Rotation of the sun measured from Mount Wilson white-light images

TL;DR: In this paper, the instrumentation, data and data reduction procedures used in white light observations of sunspot rotation rates were described, and the data were all gathered using the same Mt. Wilson telescope, which has had three different main lenses in the interval 1981-82.
Journal ArticleDOI

Using Stellar Limb-Darkening to Refine the Properties of HD 209458b

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used multiband photometry to refine estimates for the planetary radius and orbital inclination of the transiting planet system HD 209458b using two gratings with a resolution R = 1500 and a combined wavelength range of 290-1030 nm.
Journal ArticleDOI

Discovery and characterization of transiting super earths using an all-sky transit survey and follow-up by the James Webb Space Telescope

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluate the prospects for an all-sky transit survey targeted to the brightest stars, that would find the most favorable cases for photometric and spectroscopic characterization using the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST).
Journal ArticleDOI

Collision-induced absorption coefficients of H2 pairs at temperatures from 60 K to 1000 K

TL;DR: In this article, collision-induced absorption data of H2 pairs at temperatures between 400 K and 1000 K were presented for the first time, based on a careful interpolation and extension of the existing low temperature data, which were suited for use in planetary atmospheric modelling.
Journal ArticleDOI

Water Vapor in the Spectrum of the Extrasolar Planet HD 189733b: 1. the Transit

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used the Hubble Space Telescope Wide Field Camera 3 (HST WFC3) with its G141 grism covering 1.1 um to 1.7 um and spatially scanned the image across the detector at 2\arcsec$s^{-1}$.
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