A Two-limb Explanation for the Optical-to-infrared Transmission Spectrum of the Hot Jupiter HAT-P-32Ab

Abstract

We present a new optical transmission spectrum of the hot Jupiter HAT-P-32Ab acquired with the Carnegie Observatories Spectrograph and Multiobject Imaging Camera (COSMIC) on the Palomar 200 inch Hale Telescope (P200). The P200/COSMIC transmission spectrum, covering a wavelength range of 3990--9390 , is composed of 25 spectrophotometric bins with widths ranging from 200 to 400 and consistent with previous transit measurements obtained in the common wavelength range. We derive a combined optical transmission spectrum based on measurements from five independent instruments, which, along with the 1.1--1.7 μm spectrum acquired by the Hubble Space Telescope and two Spitzer measurements, exhibits an enhanced scattering slope blueward of a relatively flat optical continuum, a water absorption feature at 1.4 μm, and a carbon dioxide feature at 4.4 μm. We perform Bayesian spectral retrieval analyses on the 0.3--5.1 μm transmission spectrum and find that it can be well explained by a two-limb approximation of 134+45-33× solar metallicity, with a strongly hazy morning limb of 1134+232-194 K and a haze-free evening limb of 1516+33-44~K. This makes HAT-P-32Ab a promising target for James Webb Space Telescope to look for asymmetric signatures directly in the light curves.

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