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Possible stratospheric emission in the warm Neptune GJ 436 b from high-resolution spectroscopy

Luke Finnerty, Michael P Fitzgerald, Jerry W Xuan, Daniel Echeverri, Nemanja Jovanovic, Dimitri Mawet, Geoffrey A Blake, Ashley Baker, Randall Bartos, Benjamin Calvin, Sylvain Cetre, Jacques-Robert Delorme, Greg Doppmann, Katelyn Horstman, Chih-Chun Hsu, Julie Inglis, Joshua Liberman, Ronald A López, Evan Morris, Jacklyn Pezzato-Rovner, Jean-Baptiste Ruffio, Ben Sappey, Tobias Schofield, Andrew Skemer, J. Kent Wallace, Nicole L Wallack, Jason J Wang, Ji Wang, Yinzi Xin

Abstract

We present high spectral resolution $L$ band (2.91--3.85 $μ$m) observations of the warm Neptune GJ 436 b from Keck II/KPIC. KPIC's single-mode fiber feed reduces the $L$ band sky background by a factor of 100, significantly improving sensitivity compared to a seeing-limited spectrometer and enabling a tentative ($\rm SNR = 3-4$) cross-correlation detection of GJ 436 b with a thermally inverted atmospheric model. In contrast with recent results from $JWST$ and high-resolution transmission spectroscopy, our retrieval analysis prefers the presence of H$_2$O, and possibly CH$_4$, molecular features in emission. The broad-band continuum flux associated with the maximum-likelihood model is substantially higher than expected based on both the $\sim670\rm\ K$ equilibrium temperature of GJ 436 b and previous results from low-resolution spectroscopy. We demonstrate that the loss of continuum information during the processing of high-resolution spectra makes our analysis effectively insensitive to the absolute continuum level of the planet, and that scaling the maximum-likelihood model to match the broad-band flux measured from low-resolution observations of GJ 436 b results in a detection of similar strength in cross-correlation. These results could be explained by a thermal inversion arising above a haze layer in the upper atmosphere of \gjb. Further observations, ideally post-eclipse in order to break the $K_p - Δv_{sys}$ degeneracy, are needed to clarify this possible detection. This work demonstrates the potential of $L$ band high-resolution spectroscopy for characterizing significantly smaller and cooler exoplanets compared with hot Jupiters.

Possible stratospheric emission in the warm Neptune GJ 436 b from high-resolution spectroscopy

Abstract

We present high spectral resolution band (2.91--3.85 m) observations of the warm Neptune GJ 436 b from Keck II/KPIC. KPIC's single-mode fiber feed reduces the band sky background by a factor of 100, significantly improving sensitivity compared to a seeing-limited spectrometer and enabling a tentative () cross-correlation detection of GJ 436 b with a thermally inverted atmospheric model. In contrast with recent results from and high-resolution transmission spectroscopy, our retrieval analysis prefers the presence of HO, and possibly CH, molecular features in emission. The broad-band continuum flux associated with the maximum-likelihood model is substantially higher than expected based on both the equilibrium temperature of GJ 436 b and previous results from low-resolution spectroscopy. We demonstrate that the loss of continuum information during the processing of high-resolution spectra makes our analysis effectively insensitive to the absolute continuum level of the planet, and that scaling the maximum-likelihood model to match the broad-band flux measured from low-resolution observations of GJ 436 b results in a detection of similar strength in cross-correlation. These results could be explained by a thermal inversion arising above a haze layer in the upper atmosphere of \gjb. Further observations, ideally post-eclipse in order to break the degeneracy, are needed to clarify this possible detection. This work demonstrates the potential of band high-resolution spectroscopy for characterizing significantly smaller and cooler exoplanets compared with hot Jupiters.
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Table of Contents

  1. Introduction