4.7 Article

WASP-80b has a dayside within the T-dwarf range

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 450, Issue 3, Pages 2279-2290

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stv706

Keywords

planets and satellites: atmospheres; planets and satellites: individual: WASP-80b; binaries: eclipsing; brown dwarfs; Hertzsprung-Russell and colour-magnitude diagrams; stars: late-type

Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) [P300P2-147773]
  2. F.R.I.A. fund of the FNRS
  3. SNSF in the frame of the National Centre for Competence in Research 'PlanetS'
  4. Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (MINECO)
  5. 'Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional' (FEDER) [AYA2012-39612-C03-01, ESP2013-48391-C4-1-R]
  6. Belgian Fund for Scientific Research (Fond National de la Recherche Scientifique, F.R.S-FNRS) [FRFC 2.5.594.09.F]
  7. National Aeronautics and Space Administration
  8. National Science Foundation
  9. STFC [ST/I001719/1, ST/I000666/1, PP/F000065/1, ST/K001515/1, PP/F000073/1, ST/L000733/1, ST/J001651/1, ST/K006126/1, ST/G001006/1, ST/L00139X/1, PP/D000890/1, ST/M001296/1, ST/J000027/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  10. Science and Technology Facilities Council [ST/J001651/1, PP/F000065/1, ST/M001296/1, ST/L00139X/1, ST/I000666/1, ST/K006126/1, ST/G001006/1, ST/I001719/1, ST/L000733/1, ST/J000027/1, ST/K001515/1, PP/D000890/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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WASP-80b is a missing link in the study of exoatmospheres. It falls between the warm Neptunes and the hot Jupiters and is amenable for characterization, thanks to its host star's properties. We observed the planet through transit and during occultation with Warm Spitzer. Combining our mid-infrared transits with optical time series, we find that the planet presents a transmission spectrum indistinguishable from a horizontal line. In emission, WASP-80b is the intrinsically faintest planet whose dayside flux has been detected in both the 3.6 and 4.5 mu m Spitzer channels. The depths of the occultations reveal that WASP-80b is as bright and as red as a T4 dwarf, but that its temperature is cooler. If planets go through the equivalent of an L-T transition, our results would imply that this happens at cooler temperatures than for brown dwarfs. Placing WASP-80b's dayside into a colour-magnitude diagram, it falls exactly at the junction between a blackbody model and the T-dwarf sequence; we cannot discern which of those two interpretations is the more likely. WASP-80b's flux density is as low as GJ 436b at 3.6 mu m; the planet's dayside is also fainter, but bluer than HD 189733Ab's nightside (in the [3.6] and [4.5]Spitzer bands). Flux measurements on other planets with similar equilibrium temperatures are required to establish whether irradiated gas giants, such as brown dwarfs, transition between two spectral classes. An eventual detection of methane absorption in transmission would also help lift that degeneracy. We obtained a second series of high-resolution spectra during transit, using HARPS. We reanalyse the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect. The data now favour an aligned orbital solution and a stellar rotation nearly three times slower than stellar line broadening implies. A contribution to stellar line broadening, maybe macroturbulence, is likely to have been underestimated for cool stars, whose rotations have therefore been systematically overestimated.

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