Introduces a reflection spectroscopy metric and uses KELT-9 injection-recovery tests to demonstrate that rotational line broadening from rapid stellar rotation and large misalignments must be included when assessing detectability of exoplanet reflected spectra.
A ground-based NUV secondary eclipse observation of KELT-9b
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abstract
KELT-9b is a recently discovered exoplanet with a 1.49 d orbit around a B9.5/A0-type star. The unparalleled levels of UV irradiation it receives from its host star put KELT-9b in its own unique class of ultra-hot Jupiters, with an equilibrium temperature > 4000 K. The high quantities of dissociated hydrogen and atomic metals present in the dayside atmosphere of KELT-9b bear more resemblance to a K-type star than a gas giant. We present a single observation of KELT-9b during its secondary eclipse, taken with the Wide Field Camera on the Isaac Newton Telescope (INT). This observation was taken in the U-band, a window particularly sensitive to Rayleigh scattering. We do not detect a secondary eclipse signal, but our 3$\sigma$ upper limit of 181 ppm on the depth allows us to constrain the dayside temperature of KELT-9b at pressures of ~30 mbar to 4995 K (3$\sigma$). Although we can place an observational constraint of $A_g<$ 0.14, our models suggest that the actual value is considerably lower than this due to H$^-$ opacity. This places KELT-9b squarely in the albedo regime populated by its cooler cousins, almost all of which reflect very small components of the light incident on their daysides. This work demonstrates the ability of ground-based 2m-class telescopes like the INT to perform secondary eclipse studies in the NUV, which have previously only been conducted from space-based facilities.
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astro-ph.EP 1years
2026 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
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Spinning out of focus: The challenge of rotational line broadening in exoplanet reflection spectroscopy
Introduces a reflection spectroscopy metric and uses KELT-9 injection-recovery tests to demonstrate that rotational line broadening from rapid stellar rotation and large misalignments must be included when assessing detectability of exoplanet reflected spectra.