4.6 Article

A PRECISE WATER ABUNDANCE MEASUREMENT FOR THE HOT JUPITER WASP-43b

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS
Volume 793, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/2041-8205/793/2/L27

Keywords

planets and satellites: atmospheres; planets and satellites: composition; planets and satellites: individual (WASP-43b)

Funding

  1. NASA [NAS 5-26555]
  2. NASA through a grant from the Space Telescope Science Institute
  3. National Science Foundation
  4. Alfred P. Sloan Foundation through a Sloan Research Fellowship
  5. NASA
  6. NSF
  7. Tennessee State University
  8. State of Tennessee through its Centers of Excellence program
  9. European Community [247060]
  10. [GO-13467]

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The water abundance in a planetary atmosphere provides a key constraint on the planet's primordial origins because water ice is expected to play an important role in the core accretion model of planet formation. However, the water content of the solar system giant planets is not well known because water is sequestered in clouds deep in their atmospheres. By contrast, short-period exoplanets have such high temperatures that their atmospheres have water in the gas phase, making it possible to measure the water abundance for these objects. We present a precise determination of the water abundance in the atmosphere of the 2 M-Jup short-period exoplanet WASP-43b based on thermal emission and transmission spectroscopy measurements obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope. We find the water content is consistent with the value expected in a solar composition gas at planetary temperatures (0.4-3.5x solar at 1 sigma confidence). The metallicity of WASP-43b's atmosphere suggested by this result extends the trend observed in the solar system of lower metal enrichment for higher planet masses.

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