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H- and Dissociation in Ultra-hot Jupiters: A Retrieval Case Study of WASP-18b

Published 15 Apr 2020 in astro-ph.EP | (2004.07252v1)

Abstract: Atmospheres of a number of ultra-hot Jupiters (UHJs) with temperatures $\gtrsim$2000~K have been observed recently. Many of these planets show largely featureless thermal spectra in the near-infrared observed with the HST WFC3 spectrograph (1.1-1.7~$\mu$m) even though this spectral range contains strong H$_2$O opacity. Recent works have proposed the possibility of H- opacity masking the H$_2$O feature and/or thermal dissociation of H$_2$O causing its apparent depletion at the high temperatures of UHJs. In this work we test these hypotheses using observations of the exoplanet WASP-18b as a case study. We report detailed atmospheric retrievals of the planet using the HyDRA retrieval code, extended to include the effects of H- opacity and thermal dissociation. We report constraints on the H$_2$O, CO and H- abundances as well as the pressure-temperature profile of the dayside atmosphere for retrievals with and without H-/dissociation for each dataset. We find that the H$_2$O and H- abundances are relatively unconstrained given the featureless WFC3 spectra. We do not conclusively detect H- in the planet contrary to previous studies which used equilibrium models to infer its presence. The constraint on the CO abundance depends on the combination of WFC3 and Spitzer data, ranging from solar to super-solar CO values. We additionally see signs of a thermal inversion from two of the datasets. Our study demonstrates the potential of atmospheric retrievals of UHJs including the effects of H- and thermal dissociation of molecules.

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