We present the first ground-based detection of thermal emission from an exoplanet in the H-band. Using HAWK-I on the VLT, we observed an occultation of WASP-19b by its G8V-type host star. WASP-19b is a Jupiter-mass planet with an orbital period of only 19 h, and thus, being highly irradiated, is expected to be hot. We measure an H-band occultation depth of 0.259+0.046-0.044, which corresponds to an H-band brightness temperature of TH = 2580 ± 125 K. A cloud-free model of the planet's atmosphere, with no redistribution of energy from day-side to night-side, under predicts the planet/star flux density ratio by a factor of two. As the stellar parameters, and thus the level of planetary irradiation, are well-constrained by measurement, it is likely that our model of the planet's atmosphere is too simple. © ESO, 2010.
CITATION STYLE
Anderson, D. R., Gillon, M., Maxted, P. F. L., Barman, T. S., Collier Cameron, A., Hellier, C., … Triaud, A. H. M. J. (2010). H-band thermal emission from the 19-h period planet WASP-19b. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 513(2). https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201014226
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