ArXiv TLDR

Cloudy with a chance of metals: Indications of CO$_2$ in the atmosphere of GJ 1214 b from high-resolution K-band spectroscopy

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2604.15292

L. Nortmann, D. Cont, F. Lesjak, A. D. Rains, A. Lavail + 11 more

astro-ph.EP

TLDR

High-res K-band spectroscopy suggests CO2 presence in GJ 1214 b's atmosphere, supporting JWST findings.

Key contributions

  • Analyzed eight transits of GJ 1214 b using CRIRES+ in K band with SYSREM for signal extraction.
  • Detected CO2 at S/N ~3.6 with 3.4σ confidence; no detection for H2O, CO, CH4, H2S, NH3.
  • Bayesian retrieval indicates moderate metallicity and temperature consistent with JWST data.
  • Results align with JWST NIRSpec observations, suggesting CO2 is a key atmospheric component.

Why it matters

This study provides high-resolution evidence of CO2 in GJ 1214 b's atmosphere, a milestone for characterizing sub-Neptune exoplanets. It bridges ground-based and JWST data, advancing our understanding of exoplanet atmospheres.

Original Abstract

Sub-Neptune exoplanets frequently exhibit muted transmission spectra, with GJ 1214 b being the most prominent example. Following years of intense observing campaigns yielding featureless planetary spectra, recent observations with JWST revealed the first possible atmospheric signatures. We present high-resolution transmission spectroscopy of GJ 1214 b based on eight transits obtained with the CRIRES$^+$ spectrograph in the K band. We used SYSREM to remove telluric and stellar signals and searched for signatures of H2O, CO, CH4, H2S, NH3, and CO2 using the cross-correlation technique. We obtained non-detections for the first five molecules and used injection recovery tests to derive upper limits on the atmosphere. For CO$_2$ we measure a CCF signal at S/N ~ 3.6, with a detailed investigation showing no obvious indication that it is caused by correlated noise. A Welch t-test confirmed the in-trail and out-of-trail distributions to be different at $3.4 σ$ confidence. A Bayesian retrieval framework with free chemistry, resulted in volume mixing ratios corresponding to a metallicity of $[\mathrm{M/H}]=0.48^{+0.89}_{-1.70}$, an opacity deck pressure of $\log_{10}(P_\mathrm{c}) = -3.04^{+2.52}_{-1.53}$ and a planet temperature of $T_\mathrm{iso}=398^{+283}_{-197}$ K, consistent with a value intermediate between the day- and night-side T-p's derived from JWST data. While these values correspond to relatively large signal amplitudes predicted for CO2 features in the mid-infrared, they are compatible with JWST NIRSpec observations within the models' $1.5σ$ uncertainties. Further modelling and additional data are required to confirm the atmospheric signatures and obtain a comprehensive interpretation of low- and high-resolution data. Overall, our results support previous findings that CO2 is likely to be a significant component of the atmosphere of GJ 1214 b.

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