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Abstract Hundreds of exoplanets between 1 and 1.8 times the size of Earth have been discovered on close-in orbits. However, these planets show such a diversity in densities that some appear to be made entirely of iron, while others appear to host gaseous envelopes. To test this diversity in composition, we update the masses of five rocky exoplanets (HD 93963 A b, Kepler-10 b, Kepler-100 b, Kepler-407 b, and TOI-1444 b) and present the confirmation of a new planet (TOI-1011) using 187 high-precision radial velocities from Gemini/MAROON-X and Keck/KPF. Our updated planet masses suggest compositions closer to that of Earth than previous literature values for all planets in our sample. In particular, we report that two previously identified “super-Mercuries” (Kepler-100 b and HD 93963 A b) have lower masses that suggest less iron-rich compositions. We then compare the ratio of iron to rock-building species with the abundance ratios of those elements in their host stars. These updated planet compositions do not suggest a steep relationship between planet and host star compositions, contradictory to previous results, and suggest that planets and host stars have similar abundance ratios.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available July 23, 2026
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Abstract We have observed electron impact fluorescence from CO2to excite the Cameron bands (CBs), CO (a3Π →X1Σ+; 180–280 nm), the first-negative group (1NG) bands, CO+(B2Σ+→X2Σ+; 180–320 nm), the fourth-positive group (4PG) bands, CO (A1Π →X1Σ+; 111–280 nm), and the UV doublet, CO2+( 288.3 and 289.6 nm) in the ultraviolet (UV). This wavelength range matches the spectral region of past and present spacecraft equipped to observe UV dayglow and aurora emissions from the thermospheres (100–300 km) of Mars and Venus. Our large vacuum system apparatus is able to measure the emission cross sections of the strongest optically forbidden UV transitions found in planetary spectra. Based on our cross-sectional measurements, previous CB emission cross-sectional errors exceed a factor of 3. The UV doublet lifetime is perturbed through spin–orbit coupling. Forward modeling codes of the Mars dayglow have not been accurate in the mid-UV due to systematic errors in these two emission cross sections. We furnish absolute emission cross sections for several band systems over electron energies 20–100 eV for CO2. We present a CB lifetime, which together with emission cross sections, furnish a set of fundamental physical constants for electron transport codes such as AURIC (Atmospheric Ultraviolet Radiance Integrated Code). AURIC and Trans-Mars are used in the analysis of UV spectra from the Martian dayglow and aurora.more » « less
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Abstract We have analyzed medium‐resolution (full width at half maximum, FWHM = 1.2 nm), Middle UltraViolet (MUV; 180–280 nm) laboratory emission spectra of carbon monoxide (CO) excited by electron impact at 15, 20, 40, 50, and 100 eV under single‐scattering conditions at 300 K. The MUV emission spectra at 100 eV contain the Cameron Bands (CB) CO(a3Π → X1Σ+), the fourth positive group (4PG) CO(A1Π → X1Σ+), and the first negative group (1NG) CO+(B2Σ+→ X2Σ) from direct excitation and cascading‐induced emission of an optically thin CO gas. We have determined vibrational intensities and emission cross sections for these systems, important for modeling UV observations of the atmospheres of Mars and Venus. We have also measured the CB “glow” profile about the electron beam of the long‐lived CO (a3Π) state and determined its average metastable lifetime of 3 ± 1 ms. Optically allowed cascading from a host of triplet states has been found to be the dominant excitation process contributing to the CB emission cross section at 15 eV, most strongly by the d3Δ and a'3Σ+electronic states. We normalized the CB emission cross section at 15 eV electron impact energy by multilinear regression (MLR) analysis to the blended 15 eV MUV spectrum over the spectral range of 180–280 nm, based on the 4PG emission cross section at 15 eV that we have previously measured (Ajello et al., 2019,https://doi.org/10.1029/2018ja026308). We find the CB total emission cross section at 15 eV to be 7.7 × 10−17 cm2.more » « less
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