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Published November 20, 2016 | Submitted + Published
Journal Article Open

Raman Scattering by Molecular Hydrogen and Nitrogen in Exoplanetary Atmospheres

Abstract

An important source of opacity in exoplanet atmospheres at short visible and near-UV wavelengths is Rayleigh scattering of light on molecules. It is accompanied by a related, albeit weaker process—Raman scattering. We analyze the signatures of Raman scattering imprinted in the reflected light and the geometric albedo of exoplanets, which could provide information about atmospheric properties. Raman scattering affects the geometric albedo spectra of planets in the following ways. First, it causes filling-in of strong absorption lines in the incident radiation, thus producing sharp peaks in the albedo. Second, it shifts the wavelengths of spectral features in the reflected light causing the so-called Raman ghost lines. Raman scattering can also cause a broadband reduction of the albedo due to wavelength shifting of a stellar spectrum with red spectral index. Observing the Raman peaks in the albedo could be used to measure the column density of gas, thus providing constraints on the presence of clouds in the atmosphere. Observing the Raman ghost lines could be used to spectroscopically identify the main scatterer in the atmosphere, even molecules like H_2 or N_2, which do not have prominent spectral signatures in the optical wavelength range. If detected, ghost lines could also provide information about the temperature of the atmosphere. In this paper, we investigate the effects of Raman scattering in hydrogen- and nitrogen-dominated atmospheres. We analyze the feasibility of detecting the signatures of Raman scattering with the existing and future observational facilities, and of using these signatures as probes of exoplanetary atmospheres.

Additional Information

© 2016 The American Astronomical Society. Received 2016 May 20; revised 2016 September 4; accepted 2016 September 6; published 2016 November 14. We thank the anonymous referee for their insightful comments, which helped to improve the quality of the paper. We thank the developers of DISORT for making their code publicly available. AO thanks Kelly Chance for providing tables with Raman scattering cross sections for molecular nitrogen, used for comparison with our calculated cross sections. AO also thanks Dimitri Mawet and his group for useful discussions and feedback on an early version of this paper. AO and CMH are supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, the David & Lucile Packard Foundation, and the Simons Foundation. KH acknowledges support from the Swiss National Science Foundation, the PlanetS NCCR and the MERAC Foundation. Software: DISORT (Stamnes et al. 1988, ftp://climate1.gsfc.nasa.gov/wiscombe/Multiple_Scatt/).

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Published - Oklopčić_2016_ApJ_832_30.pdf

Submitted - 1605.07185v2.pdf

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Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
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October 23, 2023