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Creators/Authors contains: "Zalesky, Joseph"

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  1. Abstract Measurements of the carbon-to-oxygen (C/O) ratios of exoplanet atmospheres can reveal details about their formation and evolution. Recently, high-resolution cross-correlation analysis has emerged as a method of precisely constraining the C/O ratios of hot Jupiter atmospheres. We present two transits of the ultrahot Jupiter WASP-76b observed between 1.4 and 2.4μm with the high-resolution Immersion GRating INfrared Spectrometer on the Gemini-S telescope. We detected the presence of H2O, CO, and OH at signal-to-noise ratios of 6.93, 6.47, and 3.90, respectively. We performed two retrievals on this data set. A free retrieval for abundances of these three species retrieved a volatile metallicity of C + O H = 0.70 0.93 + 1.27 , consistent with the stellar value, and a supersolar carbon-to-oxygen ratio of C/O = 0.80 0.11 + 0.07 . We also ran a chemically self-consistent grid retrieval, which agreed with the free retrieval within 1σbut favored a slightly more substellar metallicity and solar C/O ratio ( C + O H = 0.74 0.17 + 0.23 and C/O = 0.59 0.14 + 0.13 ). A variety of formation pathways may explain the composition of WASP-76b. Additionally, we found systemic (Vsys) and Keplerian (Kp) velocity offsets which were broadly consistent with expectations from 3D general circulation models of WASP-76b, with the exception of a redshiftedVsysfor H2O. Future observations to measure the phase-dependent velocity offsets and limb differences at high resolution on WASP-76b will be necessary to understand the H2O velocity shift. Finally, we find that the population of exoplanets with precisely constrained C/O ratios generally trends toward super-solar C/O ratios. More results from high-resolution observations or JWST will serve to further elucidate any population-level trends. 
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  2. Abstract Ground-based high-resolution and space-based low-resolution spectroscopy are the two main avenues through which transiting exoplanet atmospheres are studied. Both methods provide unique strengths and shortcomings, and combining the two can be a powerful probe into an exoplanet’s atmosphere. Within a joint atmospheric retrieval framework, we combined JWST NIRSpec/G395H secondary eclipse spectra and Gemini South/IGRINS pre- and post-eclipse thermal emission observations of the hot Jupiter WASP-77A b. Our inferences from the IGRINS and NIRSpec data sets are consistent with each other, and combining the two allows us to measure the gas abundances of H2O and CO, as well as the vertical thermal structure, with higher precision than either data set provided individually. We confirm WASP-77A b’s subsolar metallicity ([(C+O)/H] = −0.61 0.09 + 0.10 ) and solar C/O ratio (C/O = 0.57 0.06 + 0.06 ) . The two types of data are complementary, and our abundance inferences are mostly driven by the IGRINS data, while inference of the thermal structure is driven by the NIRSpec data. Our ability to draw inferences from the post-eclipse IGRINS data is highly sensitive to the number of singular values removed in the detrending process, potentially due to high and variable humidity. We also search for signatures for atmospheric dynamics in the IGRINS data and find that propagated ephemeris error can manifest as either an orbital eccentricity or a strong equatorial jet. Neither are detected when using more up-to-date ephemerides. However, we find moderate evidence of thermal inhomogeneity and measure a cooler nightside that presents itself in the later phases after secondary eclipse. 
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