Awesome SOSS: atmospheric characterization of WASP-96 b using the JWST early release observations

J Taylor, M Radica, L Welbanks… - Monthly Notices of …, 2023 - academic.oup.com
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 2023academic.oup.com
The newly operational JWST offers the potential to study the atmospheres of distant worlds
with precision that has not been achieved before. One of the first exoplanets observed by
JWST in the summer of 2022 was WASP-96 b, a hot Saturn orbiting a G8 star. As a part of
the Early Release Observations programme, one transit of WASP-96 b was observed with
NIRISS/SOSS to capture its transmission spectrum from 0.6 to 2.85 μm. In this work, we
utilize four retrieval frameworks to report precise and robust measurements of WASP-96 b's …
Abstract
The newly operational JWST offers the potential to study the atmospheres of distant worlds with precision that has not been achieved before. One of the first exoplanets observed by JWST in the summer of 2022 was WASP-96 b, a hot Saturn orbiting a G8 star. As a part of the Early Release Observations programme, one transit of WASP-96 b was observed with NIRISS/SOSS to capture its transmission spectrum from 0.6 to 2.85 μm. In this work, we utilize four retrieval frameworks to report precise and robust measurements of WASP-96 b’s atmospheric composition. We constrain the logarithmic volume mixing ratios of multiple chemical species in its atmosphere, including: H2O = , CO2 = , and K = , thus generally consistent with 1× solar (with the exception of CO2). Notably, our results offer a first abundance constraint on potassium in WASP-96 b’s atmosphere and important inferences on carbon-bearing species such as CO2 and CO. Our short wavelength NIRISS/SOSS data are best explained by the presence of an enhanced Rayleigh scattering slope, despite previous inferences of a clear atmosphere – although we find no evidence for a grey cloud deck. Finally, we explore the data resolution required to appropriately interpret observations using NIRISS/SOSS. We find that our inferences are robust against different binning schemes. That is, from low R = 125 to the native resolution of the instrument, the bulk atmospheric properties of the planet are consistent. Our systematic analysis of these exquisite observations demonstrates the power of NIRISS/SOSS to detect and constrain multiple molecular and atomic species in the atmospheres of hot giant planets.
Oxford University Press