Atmospheric, Orbital and Secondary Eclipse Analysis of HAT-P-30-WASP-51b
Abstract
HAT-P-30-WASP-51b is a hot-Jupiter planet that orbits an F star every 2.8106 days at a distance of 0.0419 AU. Using the Spitzer Space Telescope in 2012 (Spitzer Program Number 70084) we observed two secondary eclipses of the planet, one in the 3.6 μm channel on 3 January and one in the 4.5 μm channel on 17 January. We present eclipse-depth measurements of 0.00163±0.0001 and 0.00146±0.00013 and we esitmate the infrared brightness temperatures to be 1900±50 and 1600±60 for these two channels, respectively, from an analysis using our Photometry for Orbits, Eclipses, and Transits (POET) pipeline. We also refine its orbit using our own secondary-eclipse measurements in combination with radial-velocity and transit observations from both professional and amateur observers. The most notable result from this orbital analysis is a detection of eccentricity in the planet's orbit. Using only the phase of our secondary eclipses, we can constrain ecosw to a minimum of 0.0084±0.0004, a 20 sigma detection of one component of the orbit's eccentricity that is independent of the effects that stellar tides have on radial velocity data. We then characterize its atmosphere's temperature- pressure profile and molecular abundances using our Bayesian Atmospheric Radiative Transfer code (BART). Spitzer is operated by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, under a contract with NASA. This work was supported by NASA Planetary Atmospheres grant NNX12AI69G and NASA Astrophysics Data Analysis Program grant NNX13AF38G. J. Blecic holds a NASA Earth and Space Sciences Fellowship.
- Publication:
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American Astronomical Society Meeting Abstracts #227
- Pub Date:
- January 2016
- Bibcode:
- 2016AAS...22721205F