Atmospheric Characterization of Hot Jupiter CoRoT-1 b Using the Wide Field Camera 3 on the Hubble Space Telescope

Abstract Exoplanet CoRoT-1 b is intriguing because we predict it to be a transitional planet between hot Jupiters (equilibrium temperatures ∼1500 K) and ultrahot Jupiters (equilibrium temperatures >2000 K). In 2012, observations of CoRoT-1 b included one primary transit and three secondary eclips...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inThe Astronomical journal Vol. 164; no. 1; pp. 19 - 33
Main Authors Glidic, Kayli, Schlawin, Everett, Wiser, Lindsey, Zhou, Yifan, Deming, Drake, Line, Michael
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Madison The American Astronomical Society 01.07.2022
IOP Publishing
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Summary:Abstract Exoplanet CoRoT-1 b is intriguing because we predict it to be a transitional planet between hot Jupiters (equilibrium temperatures ∼1500 K) and ultrahot Jupiters (equilibrium temperatures >2000 K). In 2012, observations of CoRoT-1 b included one primary transit and three secondary eclipses with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) combined with the G141 grism (1.1–1.7 μ m) in stare mode. We aimed to further investigate CoRoT-1 b through its secondary eclipses, producing spectrophotometric light curves corrected for charge trapping, also known as the ramp effect in time-series observations with the WFC3. We found that, when correcting for the ramp effect and using the typically discarded first orbit, we are better capable of constraining and optimizing the emission and transmission spectra. We did a grid retrieval in this transitional temperature regime and found the spectra for CoRoT-1 b to be featureless and to agree with an inverted temperature–pressure ( T – P ) profile. We note, however, that the contribution function for the WFC3 indicates pressures probed near 10 −3 to 10 0 bar, which correspond to a nearly isothermal region in our T – P profile, thereby indicating that the inversion at high altitude is model-dependent. Despite no distinct features, the analysis done on CoRoT-1 b paves the way to high-precision results with stare mode spectroscopy. As a new generation of observations from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) approaches, CoRoT-1 b might be an interesting follow-up target because the time-series spectroscopic modes of JWST’s NIRSpec, MIRI, and NIRCam instruments will be analogous to HST’s stare mode.
Bibliography:AAS35170
The Solar System, Exoplanets, and Astrobiology
ISSN:0004-6256
1538-3881
DOI:10.3847/1538-3881/ac6cdb