Optical phase curve of the ultra-hot Jupiter WASP-121b

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Abstract

We present the analysis of TESS optical photometry of WASP-121b, which reveals the phase curve of this transiting ultra-hot Jupiter. Its hotspot is located at the sub-stellar point, showing inefficient heat transport from the dayside (2870 ± 50 K) to the nightside (<2500 K at 3σ) at the altitudes probed by TESS. The TESS eclipse depth, measured at the shortest wavelength to date for WASP-121b, confirms the strong deviation from blackbody planetary emission. Our atmospheric retrieval on the complete emission spectrum supports the presence of a temperature inversion, which can be explained by the presence of VO and possibly TiO and FeH. The strong planetary emission at short wavelengths could arise from an H- continuum.

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Bourrier, V., Kitzmann, D., Kuntzer, T., Nascimbeni, V., Lendl, M., Lavie, B., … Wyttenbach, A. (2020). Optical phase curve of the ultra-hot Jupiter WASP-121b. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 637. https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201936647

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