Early Release Science of the exoplanet WASP-39b with JWST NIRSpec G395H

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Issue Date
2023-01-09Author
Brande, Jonathan
Crossfield, Ian J. M.
Publisher
Nature Research
Type
Article
Article Version
Scholarly/refereed, publisher version
Rights
Copyright © 2023, The Author(s). This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons CC BY license.
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Measuring the abundances of carbon and oxygen in exoplanet atmospheres is considered a crucial avenue for unlocking the formation and evolution of exoplanetary systems1,2. Access to the chemical inventory of an exoplanet requires high-precision observations, often inferred from individual molecular detections with low-resolution space-based3,4,5 and high-resolution ground-based6,7,8 facilities. Here we report the medium-resolution (R ≈ 600) transmission spectrum of an exoplanet atmosphere between 3 and 5 μm covering several absorption features for the Saturn-mass exoplanet WASP-39b (ref. 9), obtained with the Near Infrared Spectrograph (NIRSpec) G395H grating of JWST. Our observations achieve 1.46 times photon precision, providing an average transit depth uncertainty of 221 ppm per spectroscopic bin, and present minimal impacts from systematic effects. We detect significant absorption from CO2 (28.5σ) and H2O (21.5σ), and identify SO2 as the source of absorption at 4.1 μm (4.8σ). Best-fit atmospheric models range between 3 and 10 times solar metallicity, with sub-solar to solar C/O ratios. These results, including the detection of SO2, underscore the importance of characterizing the chemistry in exoplanet atmospheres and showcase NIRSpec G395H as an excellent mode for time-series observations over this critical wavelength range
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Citation
Alderson, Lili et al. “Early Release Science of the exoplanet WASP-39b with JWST NIRSpec G395H.” Nature vol. 614,7949 (2023): 664-669. doi:10.1038/s41586-022-05591-3
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