The Astrophysical Journal Letters (Jan 2024)

Sulfur Dioxide and Other Molecular Species in the Atmosphere of the Sub-Neptune GJ 3470 b

  • Thomas G. Beatty,
  • Luis Welbanks,
  • Everett Schlawin,
  • Taylor J. Bell,
  • Michael R. Line,
  • Matthew Murphy,
  • Isaac Edelman,
  • Thomas P. Greene,
  • Jonathan J. Fortney,
  • Gregory W. Henry,
  • Sagnick Mukherjee,
  • Kazumasa Ohno,
  • Vivien Parmentier,
  • Emily Rauscher,
  • Lindsey S. Wiser,
  • Kenneth E. Arnold

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/ad55e9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 970, no. 1
p. L10

Abstract

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We report observations of the atmospheric transmission spectrum of the sub-Neptune exoplanet GJ 3470 b taken using the Near-Infrared Camera on JWST. Combined with two archival Hubble Space Telescope/Wide-Field Camera 3 transit observations and 15 archival Spitzer transit observations, we detect water, methane, sulfur dioxide, and carbon dioxide in the atmosphere of GJ 3470 b, each with a significance of >3 σ . GJ 3470 b is the lowest-mass—and coldest—exoplanet known to show a substantial sulfur dioxide feature in its spectrum, at M _p = 11.2 M _⊕ and T _eq = 600 K. This indicates that disequilibrium photochemistry drives sulfur dioxide production in exoplanet atmospheres over a wider range of masses and temperatures than has been reported or expected. The water, carbon dioxide, and sulfur dioxide abundances we measure indicate an atmospheric metallicity of approximately 100× solar. We see further evidence for disequilibrium chemistry in our inferred methane abundance, which is significantly lower than expected from equilibrium models consistent with our measured water and carbon dioxide abundances.

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