WASP-33b's stratosphere was
detected by measuring the drop in light as the planet passed behind its
star (top). Temperatures in the low stratosphere rise because of
molecules absorbing radiation from the star (right). Without a
stratosphere, temperatures would cool down at higher altitudes (left).
Credit: Courtesy of NASA/Goddard
NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has
detected a stratosphere, one of the primary layers of Earth's
atmosphere, on a massive and blazing-hot exoplanet known as WASP-33b.
The presence of a stratosphere can provide clues about the
composition of a planet and how it formed. This atmospheric layer
includes molecules that absorb ultraviolet and visible light, acting as a
kind of 'sunscreen' for the planet it surrounds. Until now, scientists
were uncertain whether these molecules would be found in the atmospheres
of large, extremely hot planets in other star systems. These findings
will appear in the June 12 issue of the Astrophysical Journal.
'Some of these planets are so hot in their upper atmospheres, they're
essentially boiling off into space,' said Avi Mandell, a planetary
scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., and a
co-author of the study. 'At these temperatures, we don't necessarily
expect to find an atmosphere that has molecules that can lead to these
multilayered structures.'
In Earth's atmosphere, the stratosphere sits above the troposphere --
the turbulent, active-weather region that reaches from the ground to
the altitude where nearly all clouds top out. In the troposphere, the
temperature is warmer at the bottom -- ground level -- and cools down at
higher altitudes.
The stratosphere is just the opposite. In this layer, the temperature
increases with altitude, a phenomenon called temperature inversion. On
Earth, temperature inversion occurs because ozone in the stratosphere
absorbs much of the sun's ultraviolet radiation, preventing it from
reaching the surface, protecting the biosphere, and therefore warming
the stratosphere instead.
Similar temperature inversions occur in the stratospheres of other
planets in our solar system, such as Jupiter and Saturn. In these cases,
the culprit is a different group of molecules called hydrocarbons.
Neither ozone nor hydrocarbons, however, could survive at the high
temperatures of most known exoplanets, which are planets outside our
solar system. This leads to a debate as to whether stratospheres would
exist on them at all.
Using Hubble, the researchers have settled this debate by identifying
a temperature inversion in the atmosphere of WASP-33b, which has about
four-and-a-half times the mass of Jupiter. Team members also think they
know which molecule in WASP-33b's atmosphere caused the inversion --
titanium oxide.
'These two lines of evidence together make a very convincing case
that we have detected a stratosphere on an exoplanet,' said Korey
Haynes, lead author of the study. Haynes was a graduate student at
George Mason University in Fairfax, Va., and was working at Goddard with
Mandell when the research was conducted.
The researchers analyzed observations made with Hubble's Wide Field
Camera 3 by co-author Drake Deming at the University of Maryland in
College Park. Wide Field Camera 3 can capture a spectrum of the
near-infrared region where the signature for water appears. Scientists
can use the spectrum to identify water and other gases in a distant
planet's atmosphere and determine its temperature.
Haynes and her colleagues used the Hubble observations, and data from
previous studies, to measure emission from water and compare it to
emission from gas deeper in the atmosphere. The team determined that
emission from water was produced in the stratosphere at about 6,000
degrees Fahrenheit. The rest of the emission came from gas lower in the
atmosphere that was at a temperature about 3,000 degrees Fahrenheit.
The team also presented the first observational evidence that
WASP-33b's atmosphere contains titanium oxide, one of only a few
compounds that is a strong absorber of visible and ultraviolet radiation
and capable of remaining in gaseous form in an atmosphere as hot as
this one.
'Understanding the links between stratospheres and chemical
compositions is critical to studying atmospheric processes in
exoplanets,' said co-author Nikku Madhusudhan of the University of
Cambridge, United Kingdom. 'Our finding marks a key breakthrough in this
direction.'
Story Source:
The above post is reprinted from
materials provided by
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center.
Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
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