The Identification of CS2 and Evidence for Carbon-Sulfur Chemical Coupling in a Warm Giant Exoplanet Atmosphere
Anastasia Triantafillides, Thomas G. Beatty, Matthew C. Nixon, Taylor J. Bell, Everett Schlawin + 11 more
TLDR
JWST observations of WASP-80 b reveal CS2, providing evidence for carbon-sulfur chemical coupling in warm giant exoplanet atmospheres.
Key contributions
- Used JWST/NIRCam and MIRI to obtain a detailed transmission spectrum of the warm giant planet WASP-80 b.
- Identified H2O, CH4, CO2, NH3, and the crucial sulfur-bearing molecule CS2 in its atmosphere.
- Measured a high CS2 abundance, supporting new chemical models with efficient carbon-sulfur coupling via CH2S.
- Establishes CS2 as an observable tracer for disequilibrium sulfur chemistry in giant exoplanet atmospheres.
Why it matters
This paper significantly advances our understanding of exoplanet atmospheric chemistry, particularly sulfur. By identifying CS2 and confirming carbon-sulfur coupling, it validates new chemical models. This work provides a crucial observational benchmark for studying exoplanet formation and evolution.
Original Abstract
Transmission spectroscopy with the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) is revealing growing chemical complexity in giant exoplanet atmospheres. Of particular interest is sulfur, which had essentially no observational constraints before JWST. Recent work has shown that a planet's atmospheric sulfur content traces its refractory budget and is therefore a sensitive indicator of formation pathways. But despite the growing library of JWST data, the sulfur inventory of giant exoplanets remains poorly constrained: sulfur-bearing species are governed by disequilibrium chemistry and by kinetic networks that are still being revised. Here we present a transmission spectrum of the warm giant planet WASP-80 b obtained with JWST/NIRCam and MIRI over 2.4\,$μ$m--10$μ$m in three transits. We find evidence for H\textsubscript{2}O, CH\textsubscript{4}, CO\textsubscript{2}, NH\textsubscript{3}, and CS\textsubscript{2} in the atmosphere and place upper limits on CO and SO\textsubscript{2}. Our atmospheric retrievals yield $\log_{10}\mathrm{X}_{\mathrm{CS_2}} = -2.25^{+0.33}_{-0.32}$. This CS\textsubscript{2} abundance is substantially higher than predicted by earlier sulfur-chemistry schemes for H\textsubscript{2}-rich atmospheres in WASP-80 b's temperature range, but is consistent with recent chemically validated networks that include efficient carbon-sulfur coupling through CH\textsubscript{2}S. These results identify CS\textsubscript{2} as an observable tracer of sulfur disequilibrium chemistry and provide observational support for theoretically predicted carbon-sulfur chemical coupling in giant exoplanet atmospheres.
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