Spitzer Phase-curve Observations and Circulation Models of the Inflated Ultrahot Jupiter WASP-76b

Open Access
Authors
  • E.M. May
  • T.D. Komacek
  • K.B. Stevenson
  • E.M.-R. Kempton
  • J.L. Bean
  • M. Malik
  • J. Ih
  • M. Mansfield
  • A.B. Savel
  • D. Deming
  • J.-M. Desert ORCID logo
  • Y.K Feng
  • J.J. Fortney
  • T. Kataria
  • N. Lewis
  • C. Morley
  • E. Rauscher
  • A. Showman
Publication date 01-10-2021
Journal The Astronomical Journal
Article number 158
Volume | Issue number 162 | 4
Number of pages 18
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
The large radii of many hot Jupiters can only be matched by models that have hot interior adiabats, and recent theoretical work has shown that the interior evolution of hot Jupiters has a significant impact on their atmospheric structure. Due to its inflated radius, low gravity, and ultrahot equilibrium temperature, WASP-76b is an ideal case study for the impact of internal evolution on observable properties. Hot interiors should most strongly affect the nonirradiated side of the planet, and thus full phase-curve observations are critical to ascertain the effect of the interior on the atmospheres of hot Jupiters. In this work, we present the first Spitzer phase-curve observations of WASP-76b. We find that WASP-76b has an ultrahot dayside and relatively cold nightside with brightness temperatures of 2471 ± 27 K/1518 ± 61 K at 3.6 μm and 2699 ± 32 K/1259 ± 44 K at 4.5 μm, respectively. These results provide evidence for a dayside thermal inversion. Both channels exhibit small phase offsets of 0.68 ± 0º48 at 3.6 μm and 0.67 ± 0º2 at 4.5 μm. We compare our observations to a suite of general circulation models (GCMs) that consider two endmembers of interior temperature along with a broad range of frictional drag strengths. Strong frictional drag is necessary to match the small phase offsets and cold nightside temperatures observed. From our suite of cloud-free GCMs, we find that only cases with a cold interior can reproduce the cold nightsides and large phase-curve amplitude at 4.5 μm, hinting that the hot interior adiabat of WASP-76b does not significantly impact its atmospheric dynamics or that clouds blanket its nightside.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ac0e30
Published at https://arxiv.org/abs/2107.03349
Other links https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2021AJ....162..158M/abstract
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