The Astronomical Journal (Jan 2024)

A Subsolar Metallicity on the Ultra-short-period Planet HIP 65Ab

  • Luc Bazinet,
  • Stefan Pelletier,
  • Björn Benneke,
  • Ricardo Salinas,
  • Gregory N. Mace

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ad3071
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 167, no. 5
p. 206

Abstract

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Studying and understanding the physical and chemical processes that govern hot Jupiters gives us insights on the formation of these giant planets. Having a constraint on the molecular composition of their atmosphere can help us pinpoint their evolution timeline. Namely, the metal enrichment and carbon-to-oxygen ratio can give us information about where in the protoplanetary disk a giant planet may have accreted its envelope, and, subsequently, indicate if it went through migration. Here we present the first analysis of the atmosphere of the hot Jupiter HIP 65Ab. Using near-infrared high-resolution observations from the IGRINS spectrograph, we detect H _2 O and CO absorption in the dayside atmosphere of HIP 65Ab. Using a high-resolution retrieval framework, we find a CO abundance of log(CO) = $-{3.85}_{-0.36}^{+0.33}$ , which is slightly underabundant with expectation from solar composition models. We also recover a low-water abundance of log(H _2 O) = −4.42 ± 0.18, depleted by 1 order of magnitude relative to a solar-like composition. Upper limits on the abundance of all other relevant major carbon- and oxygen-bearing molecules are also obtained. Overall, our results are consistent with a sub-stellar metallicity but slightly elevated C/O. Such a composition may indicate that HIP 65Ab accreted its envelope from beyond the water snowline and underwent a disk-free migration to its current location. Alternatively, some of the oxygen on HIP 65Ab could be condensed out of the atmosphere, in which case the observed gas-phase abundances would not reflect the true bulk envelope composition.

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