ArXiv TLDR

Horizontal transport as a source of disequilibrium chemistry on the nightside of a hot exoplanet

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2605.04936

Vivien Parmentier, Kevin B. Stevenson, Luis Welbanks, Jake Taylor, Everett Schlawin + 13 more

astro-ph.EP

TLDR

JWST observations confirm horizontal transport on a hot Jupiter's nightside causes disequilibrium chemistry by advecting dayside species.

Key contributions

  • Provided the first direct observational evidence of day-to-night chemical transport on a hot Jupiter.
  • Utilized JWST/NIRSpec to analyze the atmospheric composition of exoplanet NGTS-10A b's day and night sides.
  • Detected similar H2O and CO abundances across both hemispheres, but a significant CH4 depletion on the nightside.
  • Conclusively showed that nightside CH4 depletion is due to horizontal chemical quenching, not other factors.

Why it matters

This study provides crucial empirical evidence for a long-theorized atmospheric process on exoplanets. It highlights how atmospheric circulation fundamentally shapes chemical distributions, impacting our understanding of exoplanet habitability and characterization.

Original Abstract

Hot Jupiters have temperature gradients of several hundreds of degrees between their permanent day and nightsides. In equilibrium, the primary carbon reservoir is expected to transition from CO on the dayside to CH4 on the nightside. Theory predicts that the atmospheric circulation, characterised by km/s winds, can advect chemical species from the dayside to the nightside faster than the time needed for the CO-to-CH4 chemical reaction to reach equilibrium. However direct evidence of this process has, so far, remained elusive, partly because it is often degenerate with other processes, such as vertical mixing or non-stellar elemental abundances. Here, we present observational evidence for such day-to-night transport of chemical species by observing both the dayside and the nightside of the hot Jupiter NGTS-10A b with the JWST/NIRSpec instrument. We constrain the presence of H2O and CO with similar abundances on both the dayside and nightside. Our observations are compatible with a solar-composition atmosphere at chemical equilibrium on the dayside, but indicative of disequilibrium chemistry for the nightside as it is significantly depleted in CH4 compared to equilibrium chemistry predictions. We further show that the lack of CH4 on the planet's nightside cannot be attributed to non-solar elemental abundances or to vertical mixing mechanisms and must therefore be due to horizontal chemical quenching. Our study shows the fundamental role atmospheric transport plays in shaping the distribution of chemical species on exoplanet atmospheres.

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