Hannah R. Wakeford
Goddard Space Flight Center
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Featured researches published by Hannah R. Wakeford.
Nature | 2016
David K. Sing; Jonathan J. Fortney; N. Nikolov; Hannah R. Wakeford; Tiffany Kataria; T. Evans; Suzanne Aigrain; G. E. Ballester; Adam Burrows; Drake Deming; Jean-Michel Desert; N. P. Gibson; Gregory W. Henry; Catherine M. Huitson; Heather A. Knutson; Alain Lecavelier des Etangs; F. Pont; A. Vidal-Madjar; Michael H. Williamson; Paul A. Wilson
Thousands of transiting exoplanets have been discovered, but spectral analysis of their atmospheres has so far been dominated by a small number of exoplanets and data spanning relatively narrow wavelength ranges (such as 1.1–1.7 micrometres). Recent studies show that some hot-Jupiter exoplanets have much weaker water absorption features in their near-infrared spectra than predicted. The low amplitude of water signatures could be explained by very low water abundances, which may be a sign that water was depleted in the protoplanetary disk at the planet’s formation location, but it is unclear whether this level of depletion can actually occur. Alternatively, these weak signals could be the result of obscuration by clouds or hazes, as found in some optical spectra. Here we report results from a comparative study of ten hot Jupiters covering the wavelength range 0.3–5 micrometres, which allows us to resolve both the optical scattering and infrared molecular absorption spectroscopically. Our results reveal a diverse group of hot Jupiters that exhibit a continuum from clear to cloudy atmospheres. We find that the difference between the planetary radius measured at optical and infrared wavelengths is an effective metric for distinguishing different atmosphere types. The difference correlates with the spectral strength of water, so that strong water absorption lines are seen in clear-atmosphere planets and the weakest features are associated with clouds and hazes. This result strongly suggests that primordial water depletion during formation is unlikely and that clouds and hazes are the cause of weaker spectral signatures.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2013
David K. Sing; A. Lecavelier des Etangs; Jonathan J. Fortney; Adam Burrows; F. Pont; Hannah R. Wakeford; G. E. Ballester; N. Nikolov; Gregory W. Henry; S. Aigrain; Drake Deming; T. Evans; N. P. Gibson; Catherine M. Huitson; Heather A. Knutson; A. Vidal-Madjar; Paul A. Wilson; M.H. Williamson; Kevin J. Zahnle
We present Hubble Space Telescope (HST) optical transmission spectra of the transiting hot-Jupiter WASP-12b, taken with the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph instrument. The resulting spectra cover the range 2900–10 300 A which we combined with archival Wide Field Camera 3 spectra and Spitzer photometry to cover the full optical to infrared wavelength regions. With high spatial resolution, we are able to resolve WASP-12As stellar companion in both our images and spectra, revealing that the companion is in fact a close binary M0V pair, with the three stars forming a triple-star configuration. We derive refined physical parameters of the WASP-12 system, including the orbital ephemeris, finding the exoplanets density is ∼20 per cent lower than previously estimated. From the transmission spectra, we are able to decisively rule out prominent absorption by TiO in the exoplanets atmosphere, as there are no signs of the molecules characteristic broad features nor individual bandheads. Strong pressure-broadened Na and K absorption signatures are also excluded, as are significant metal-hydride features. We compare our combined broad-band spectrum to a wide variety of existing aerosol-free atmospheric models, though none are satisfactory fits. However, we do find that the full transmission spectrum can be described by models which include significant opacity from aerosols: including Rayleigh scattering, Mie scattering, tholin haze and settling dust profiles. The transmission spectrum follows an effective extinction cross-section with a power law of index α, with the slope of the transmission spectrum constraining the quantity αT = −3528 ± 660 K, where T is the atmospheric temperature. Rayleigh scattering (α = −4) is among the best-fitting models, though requires low terminator temperatures near 900 K. Sub-micron size aerosol particles can provide equally good fits to the entire transmission spectrum for a wide range of temperatures, and we explore corundum as a plausible dust aerosol. The presence of atmospheric aerosols also helps to explain the modestly bright albedo implied by Spitzer observations, as well as the near blackbody nature of the emission spectrum. Ti-bearing condensates on the cooler night-side is the most natural explanation for the overall lack of TiO signatures in WASP-12b, indicating the day/night cold trap is an important effect for very hot Jupiters. These findings indicate that aerosols can play a significant atmospheric role for the entire wide range of hot-Jupiter atmospheres, potentially affecting their overall spectrum and energy balance.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015
David K. Sing; Hannah R. Wakeford; N. Nikolov; Jonathan J. Fortney; Adam Burrows; G. E. Ballester; Drake Deming; S. Aigrain; Jean-Michel Desert; N. P. Gibson; Gregory W. Henry; Heather A. Knutson; A. Lecavelier des Etangs; F. Pont; A. Vidal-Madjar; Michael W. Williamson; Paul A. Wilson
We present Hubble Space Telescope optical and near-IR transmission spectra of the transiting hot-Jupiter WASP-31b. The spectrum covers 0.3–1.7 μm at a resolution R ∼ 70, which we combine with Spitzer photometry to cover the full-optical to IR. The spectrum is dominated by a cloud deck with a flat transmission spectrum which is apparent at wavelengths > 0.52 μm. The cloud deck is present at high altitudes and low pressures, as it covers the majority of the expected optical Na line and near-IR H2O features. While Na i absorption is not clearly identified, the resulting spectrum does show a very strong potassium feature detected at the 4.2σ confidence level. Broadened alkali wings are not detected, indicating pressures below ∼10 mbar. The lack of Na and strong K is the first indication of a sub-solar Na/K abundance ratio in a planetary atmosphere (ln[Na/K] = −3.3 ± 2.8), which could potentially be explained by Na condensation on the planets night side, or primordial abundance variations. A strong Rayleigh scattering signature is detected at short wavelengths, with a 4σ significant slope. Two distinct aerosol size populations can explain the spectra, with a smaller sub-micron size grain population reaching high altitudes producing a blue Rayleigh scattering signature on top of a larger, lower lying population responsible for the flat cloud deck at longer wavelengths. We estimate that the atmospheric circulation is sufficiently strong to mix micron size particles upwards to the required 1–10 mbar pressures, necessary to explain the cloud deck. These results further confirm the importance of clouds in hot Jupiters, which can potentially dominate the overall spectra and may alter the abundances of key gaseous species.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2014
N. Nikolov; David K. Sing; F. Pont; Adam Burrows; Jonathan J. Fortney; G. E. Ballester; T. Evans; Catherine M. Huitson; Hannah R. Wakeford; Paul A. Wilson; S. Aigrain; Drake Deming; N. P. Gibson; Gregory W. Henry; Heather A. Knutson; A. Lecavelier des Etangs; A. Vidal-Madjar; Kevin J. Zahnle
We present an optical to near-infrared transmission spectrum of the hot Jupiter HAT-P-1b, based on Hubble Space Telescope observations, covering the spectral regime from 0.29 to 1.027 μm with Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS), which is coupled with a recent Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) transit (1.087 to 1.687 μm). We derive refined physical parameters of the HAT-P-1 system, including an improved orbital ephemeris. The transmission spectrum shows a strong absorption signature shortward of 0.55 μm, with a strong blueward slope into the near-ultraviolet. We detect atmospheric sodium absorption at a 3.3σ significance level, but find no evidence for the potassium feature. The red data imply a marginally flat spectrum with a tentative absorption enhancement at wavelength longer than ∼0.85 μm. The STIS and WFC3 spectra differ significantly in absolute radius level (4.3 ± 1.6 pressure scaleheights), implying strong optical absorption in the atmosphere of HAT-P-1b. The optical to near-infrared difference cannot be explained by stellar activity, as simultaneous stellar activity monitoring of the G0V HAT-P-1b host star and its identical companion show no significant activity that could explain the result. We compare the complete STIS and WFC3 transmission spectrum with theoretical atmospheric models which include haze, sodium and an extra optical absorber. We find that both an optical absorber and a supersolar sodium to water abundance ratio might be a scenario explaining the HAT-P-1b observations. Our results suggest that strong optical absorbers may be a dominant atmospheric feature in some hot Jupiter exoplanets.
Nature | 2016
Julien de Wit; Hannah R. Wakeford; Michaël Gillon; Nikole K. Lewis; Jeff A. Valenti; Brice-Olivier Demory; Adam J. Burgasser; Artem Burdanov; Laetitia Delrez; Emmanuel Jehin; Susan M. Lederer; D. Queloz; A. H. M. J. Triaud; Valérie Van Grootel
Three Earth-sized exoplanets were recently discovered close to the habitable zone of the nearby ultracool dwarf star TRAPPIST-1 (ref. 3). The nature of these planets has yet to be determined, as their masses remain unmeasured and no observational constraint is available for the planetary population surrounding ultracool dwarfs, of which the TRAPPIST-1 planets are the first transiting example. Theoretical predictions span the entire atmospheric range, from depleted to extended hydrogen-dominated atmospheres. Here we report observations of the combined transmission spectrum of the two inner planets during their simultaneous transits on 4 May 2016. The lack of features in the combined spectrum rules out cloud-free hydrogen-dominated atmospheres for each planet at ≥10σ levels; TRAPPIST-1 b and c are therefore unlikely to have an extended gas envelope as they occupy a region of parameter space in which high-altitude cloud/haze formation is not expected to be significant for hydrogen-dominated atmospheres. Many denser atmospheres remain consistent with the featureless transmission spectrum—from a cloud-free water-vapour atmosphere to a Venus-like one.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2013
Hannah R. Wakeford; David K. Sing; Drake Deming; N. P. Gibson; Jonathan J. Fortney; Adam Burrows; G. E. Ballester; N. Nikolov; S. Aigrain; Gregory W. Henry; Heather A. Knutson; A. Lecavelier des Etangs; F. Pont; A. Vidal-Madjar; Kevin J. Zahnle
We present Hubble Space Telescope near-infrared transmission spectroscopy of the transiting hot-Jupiter HAT-P-1b. We observed one transit with Wide Field Camera 3 using the G141 low-resolution grism to cover the wavelength range 1.0871.678 m. These time series observations were taken with the newly available spatial scan mode that increases the duty cycle by nearly a factor of two, thus improving the resulting photometric precision of the data. We measure a planet-to-star radius ratio of Rp/R =0.11709 0.00038 in the white light curve with the centre of transit occurring at 2456114.345 0.000133 (JD). We achieve S/N levels per exposure of 1840 (0.061 %) at a resolution of =19.2 nm (R 70) in the 1.1173 - 1.6549 m spectral region, providing the precision necessary to probe the transmission spectrum of the planet at close to the resolution limit of the instrument. We compute the transmission spectrum using both single target and dierential photometry with similar results. The resultant transmission spectrum shows a signicant absorption above the 5level matching the 1.4 m water absorption band. In solar composition models, the water absorption is sensitive to the 1 mbar pressure levels at the terminator. The detected absorption agrees with that predicted by an 1000 K isothermal model, as well as with that predicted by a planetary-averaged temperature model.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2015
Hannah R. Wakeford; David K. Sing
Clouds have an important role in the atmospheres of planetary bodies. It is expected that, like all the planetary bodies in our solar system, exoplanet atmospheres will also have substantial cloud coverage, and evidence is mounting for clouds in a number of hot Jupiters. In order to better characterise planetary atmospheres we need to consider the effects these clouds will have on the observed broadband transmission spectra. Here we examine the expected cloud condensate species for hot Jupiter exoplanets and the effects of various grain sizes and distributions on the resultant transmission spectra from the optical to infrared, which can be used as a broad framework when interpreting exoplanet spectra. We note that significant infrared absorption features appear in the computed transmission spectrum, the result of vibrational modes between the key species in each condensate, which can potentially be very constraining. While it may be hard to differentiate between individual condensates in the broad transmission spectra, it may be possible to discern different vibrational bonds, which can distinguish between cloud formation scenarios such as condensate clouds or photochemically generated species. Vibrational mode features are shown to be prominent when the clouds are composed of small sub-micron sized particles and can be associated with an accompanying optical scattering slope. These infrared features have potential implications for future exoplanetary atmosphere studies conducted with JWST, where such vibrational modes distinguishing condensate species can be probed at longer wavelengths.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015
N. Nikolov; David K. Sing; Adam Burrows; Jonathan J. Fortney; Gregory W. Henry; F. Pont; G. E. Ballester; S. Aigrain; Paul A. Wilson; Catherine M. Huitson; N. P. Gibson; Jean-Michel Desert; A. Lecavelier des Etangs; A. Vidal-Madjar; Hannah R. Wakeford; Kevin J. Zahnle
© 2014 The Authors. We report Hubble Space Telescope optical to near-infrared transmission spectroscopy of the hot-Jupiter WASP-6b, measured with the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph and Spitzers InfraRed Array Camera. The resulting spectrum covers the range 0.29-4.5 μm. We find evidence for modest stellar activity of WASP-6 and take it into account in the transmission spectrum. The overall main characteristic of the spectrum is an increasing radius as a function of decreasing wavelength corresponding to a change of Δ (Rp/R*) = 0.0071 from 0.33 to 4.5 μm. The spectrum suggests an effective extinction cross-section with a power law of index consistent with Rayleigh scattering, with temperatures of 973 ± 144K at the planetary terminator. We compare the transmission spectrum with hot-Jupiter atmospheric models including condensate-free and aerosol-dominated models incorporating Mie theory. While none of the clear-atmosphere models is found to be in good agreement with the data, we find that the complete spectrum can be described by models that include significant opacity from aerosols including Fe-poor Mg2 SiO4, MgSiO3, KCl and Na2S dust condensates.WASP- 6b is the second planet after HD 189733b which has equilibrium temperatures near ~1200K and shows prominent atmospheric scattering in the optical.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2016
T. Evans; David K. Sing; Hannah R. Wakeford; N. Nikolov; G. E. Ballester; Benjamin Drummond; Tiffany Kataria; N. P. Gibson; David S. Amundsen; J. Spake
The authors would like to thank the referee for their prompt and thoughtful review. This work is based on observations made with the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, obtained at the Space Telescope Science Institute, which is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc., under NASA contract NAS 5-26555. These observations are associated with program GO-14468. The authors are grateful to the WASP-121 discovery team for generously providing the ground-based photometric light curves. The research leading to these results received funding from the European Research Council under the European Union Seventh Framework Program (FP7/2007-2013) ERC grant agreement no. 336792. H.R.W. acknowledges support by an appointment to the NASA Postdoctoral Program at Goddard Space Flight Center, administered by ORAU and USRA through a contract with NASA. N.P.G. gratefully acknowledges support from the Royal Society in the form of a University Research Fellowship.
Nature | 2017
T. Evans; David K. Sing; Tiffany Kataria; Jayesh Goyal; N. Nikolov; Hannah R. Wakeford; Drake Deming; Mark S. Marley; David S. Amundsen; G. E. Ballester; Joanna K. Barstow; Lotfi Ben-Jaffel; V. Bourrier; Lars A. Buchhave; Ofer Cohen; D. Ehrenreich; Antonio Garcia Munoz; Gregory W. Henry; Heather A. Knutson; Panayotis Lavvas; Alain Lecavelier des Etangs; Nikole K. Lewis; Mercedes Lopez-Morales; Avi M. Mandell; J. Sanz-Forcada; Pascal Tremblin; Roxana Lupu
Infrared radiation emitted from a planet contains information about the chemical composition and vertical temperature profile of its atmosphere. If upper layers are cooler than lower layers, molecular gases will produce absorption features in the planetary thermal spectrum. Conversely, if there is a stratosphere—where temperature increases with altitude—these molecular features will be observed in emission. It has been suggested that stratospheres could form in highly irradiated exoplanets, but the extent to which this occurs is unresolved both theoretically and observationally. A previous claim for the presence of a stratosphere remains open to question, owing to the challenges posed by the highly variable host star and the low spectral resolution of the measurements. Here we report a near-infrared thermal spectrum for the ultrahot gas giant WASP-121b, which has an equilibrium temperature of approximately 2,500 kelvin. Water is resolved in emission, providing a detection of an exoplanet stratosphere at 5σ confidence. These observations imply that a substantial fraction of incident stellar radiation is retained at high altitudes in the atmosphere, possibly by absorbing chemical species such as gaseous vanadium oxide and titanium oxide.