Limits on the atmospheric metallicity and aerosols of the sub-Neptune GJ 3090 b from high-resolution CRIRES+ spectroscopy

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 538, Issue 4, pp.3263-3283

Authors:

Luke T. Parker, João M. Mendonça, Hannah Diamond-Lowe, Jayne L. Birkby, Annabella Meech, Sophia R. Vaughan, Matteo Brogi, Chloe Fisher, Lars A. Buchhave, Aaron Bello-Arufe, Laura Kreidberg, Jason Dittmann

Abstract:

The sub-Neptune planets have no solar system analogues, and their low bulk densities suggest thick atmospheres containing degenerate quantities of volatiles and H/He, surrounding cores of unknown sizes. Measurements of their atmospheric composition can help break these degeneracies, but many previous studies at low spectral resolution have largely been hindered by clouds or hazes, returning muted spectra. Here, we present the first comprehensive study of a short-period sub-Neptune using ground-based, high-resolution spectroscopy, which is sensitive to the cores of spectral lines that can extend above potential high altitude aerosol layers. We observe four CRIRES+ K-band transits of the warm sub-Neptune GJ 3090 b (T eq = 693 ± 18 K) which orbits an M2V host star. Despite the high quality data and sensitivity to CH4, H2O, NH3, and H2S, we detect no molecular species. Injection-recovery tests are consistent with two degenerate scenarios. First, GJ 3090 b may host a highly metal-enriched atmosphere with > 150 Z ⊙ and mean molecular weight > 7.1 g mol −1, representing a volatile dominated envelope with a H/He mass fraction xH/He<33 per cent, and an unconstrained aerosol layer. Second, the data are consistent with a high altitude cloud or haze layer at pressures < 3.3 ×10−5 bar, for any metallicity. GJ 3090 b joins the growing evidence to suggest that high metallicity atmospheres and high altitude aerosol layers are common within the warm (500 < Teq < 800 K) sub-Neptune population. We discuss the observational challenges posed by the M-dwarf host star, and suggest observing strategies for transmission spectroscopy of challenging targets around M-dwarfs for existing and ELT instrumentation.

Volatile-rich Sub-Neptunes as Hydrothermal Worlds: The Case of K2-18 b

The Astrophysical Journal Letters American Astronomical Society 977:2 (2024) l51

Authors:

Cindy N Luu, Xinting Yu, Christopher R Glein, Hamish Innes, Artyom Aguichine, Joshua Krissansen-Totton, Julianne I Moses, Shang-Min Tsai, Xi Zhang, Ngoc Truong, Jonathan J Fortney

Novel physics of escaping secondary atmospheres may shape the cosmic shoreline

(2024)

Authors:

Richard D Chatterjee, Raymond Pierrehumbert

The Featherweight Giant: Unraveling the Atmosphere of a 17 Myr Planet with JWST

The Astronomical Journal American Astronomical Society 168:6 (2024) 297

Authors:

Pa Chia Thao, Andrew W Mann, Adina D Feinstein, Peter Gao, Daniel Thorngren, Yoav Rotman, Luis Welbanks, Alexander Brown, Girish M Duvvuri, Kevin France, Isabella Longo, Angeli Sandoval, P Christian Schneider, David J Wilson, Allison Youngblood, Andrew Vanderburg, Madyson G Barber, Mackenna L Wood, Natasha E Batalha, Adam L Kraus, Catriona Anne Murray, Elisabeth R Newton, Aaron Rizzuto, Benjamin M Tofflemire, Shang-Min Tsai, Jacob L Bean, Zachory K Berta-Thompson, Thomas M Evans-Soma, Cynthia S Froning, Eliza M-R Kempton, Yamila Miguel, J Sebastian Pineda

The Roasting Marshmallows Program with IGRINS on Gemini South. II. WASP-121 b has Superstellar C/O and Refractory-to-volatile Ratios

The Astronomical Journal American Astronomical Society 168:6 (2024) 293

Authors:

Peter CB Smith, Jorge A Sanchez, Michael R Line, Emily Rauscher, Megan Weiner Mansfield, Eliza M-R Kempton, Arjun Savel, Joost P Wardenier, Lorenzo Pino, Jacob L Bean, Hayley Beltz, Vatsal Panwar, Matteo Brogi, Isaac Malsky, Jonathan Fortney, Jean-Michel Désert, Stefan Pelletier, Vivien Parmentier, Sai Krishna Teja Kanumalla, Luis Welbanks, Michael Meyer, John Monnier