A Cloudy Fit to the Atmosphere of WASP-107 b
Abstract
Context. WASP-107 b has been observed comprehensively by JWST in the near- and mid-IR bands, making it an ideal planet to probe the composition and internal dynamics. Recent analysis reveals a 8-10 um silicate feature, but it still remains uncertain how silicate clouds form on this planet. Aims. We aim at fitting the complete JWST spectrum of WASP-107 b, from 0.9 um to 12 um with a physically motivated cloud model and self-consistent temperature profile. Methods. Two-stream radiative transfer is coupled to a cloud formation model until convergence between cloud and temperature profiles is reached. We search a model grid spanning metallicity, turbulent diffusivity, internal heat flux and nucleation parameters to find the best fit model. Results. The silicate cloud feature at 10 um and the near-IR molecular band strength can be simultaneously and naturally explained without assuming a parametrized temperature profile. A moderate vertical diffusivity of Kzz = 109 cm2 s-1 is needed to bring the cloud particles to the upper atmosphere of WASP-107 b. This Kzz is favored by the joint fitting of the near-IR water feature and mid-IR silicate feature -- both sensitive to clouds. From the strength of H2O and CO2 bands, our model suggests a metallicity 17 times solar. Conclusions. Even in warm planets such as WASP-107 b, silicate clouds can form in the relatively cool upper atmosphere because turbulence uplifts vapor and cloud particles. Despite having considerably fewer degrees of freedom, the self-consistent modeling approach successfully fits WASP-107 b's multi-wavelength data, instilling confidence in the derived physical parameters.
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