Abstract

Since the first discovery of an extra-solar planet around a main-sequence star, in 1995, the number of detected exoplanets has increased enormously. Over the past two decades, observational instruments (both onboard and on ground-based facilities) have revealed an astonishing diversity in planetary physical features (i. e. mass and radius), and orbital parameters (e.g. period, semi-major axis, inclination). Exoplanetary atmospheres provide direct clues to understand the origin of these differences through their observable spectral imprints. In the near future, upcoming ground and space-based telescopes will shift the focus of exoplanetary science from an era of “species discovery” to one of “atmospheric characterization”. In this context, the Atmospheric Remote-sensing Infrared Exoplanet Large (Ariel) survey, will play a key role. As it is designed to observe and characterize a large and diverse sample of exoplanets, Ariel will provide constraints on a wide gamut of atmospheric properties allowing us to extract much more information than has been possible so far (e.g. insights into the planetary formation and evolution processes). The low resolution spectra obtained with Ariel will probe layers different from those observed by ground-based high resolution spectroscopy, therefore the synergy between these two techniques offers a unique opportunity to understanding the physics of planetary atmospheres. In this paper, we set the basis for building up a framework to effectively utilise, at near-infrared wavelengths, high-resolution datasets (analyzed via the cross-correlation technique) with spectral retrieval analyses based on Ariel low-resolution spectroscopy. We show preliminary results, using a benchmark object, namely HD 209458 b, addressing the possibility of providing improved constraints on the temperature structure and molecular/atomic abundances.

Highlights

  • Past observations have revealed the existence of an amazing diversity in planetary and host star parameters, and beyond all doubt in the properties of exoplanetary atmospheres

  • The low resolution spectra obtained with Atmospheric Remote-sensing Infrared Exoplanet Large (Ariel) will probe layers different from those observed by ground-based high resolution spectroscopy, the synergy between these two techniques offers a unique opportunity to understanding the physics of planetary atmospheres

  • We present a case study of a representative hot Jupiter, namely HD 209458 b, with the objective of analyzing both HRS data acquired with the spectrograph GIANO-B mounted on the Telescopio Nazionale Galileo, TNG, (Section 2), and LRS data gathered with the HST/WFC3 instrument (Section 3)

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Summary

Introduction

Past observations have revealed the existence of an amazing diversity in planetary and host star parameters, and beyond all doubt in the properties of exoplanetary atmospheres. The first attempt at combining LRS and HRS was performed by [11], who employed a new retrieval algorithm able to compute the joint probability distribution of LRS and HSR data Their results showed that the combination of these two techniques improves constraints on both the vertical thermal structure and the retrieved molecular abundances of a planetary atmosphere. This algorithm requires significant computational power, its application is limited to the evaluation of a few thousand model HRS spectra sampled from an LRS posterior. We conclude (Section 5) by highlighting the importance of a future synergy between space-borne low-resolution telescope, like Ariel, and ground-based high-resolution facilities

Observations and analysis of GIANO-B high-resolution spectra
Discussion
Conclusions
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