Aurora Y. Kesseli, Hayley Beltz, Emily Rauscher, I. A. G. Snellen
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Up, Up, and Away: Winds and Dynamical Structure as a Function of Altitude in the Ultra-Hot Jupiter WASP-76b
Due to the unprecedented signal strengths offered by the newest
high-resolution spectrographs on 10-m class telescopes, exploring the 3D nature
of exoplanets is possible with an unprecedented level of precision. In this
paper, we present a new technique to probe the vertical structure of
exoplanetary winds and dynamics using ensembles of planet absorption lines of
varying opacity, and apply it to the well-studied ultra-hot Jupiter WASP-76b.
We then compare these results to state-of-the-art global circulation models
(GCMs) with varying magnetic drag prescriptions. We find that the known
asymmetric velocity shift in Fe I absorption during transit persists at all
altitudes, and observe tentative trends for stronger blueshifts and more narrow
line profiles deeper in the atmosphere. By comparing three different model
prescriptions (a hydrodynamical model with no drag, a magnetic drag model, and
a uniform drag model) we are able to rule out the uniform drag model due to
inconsistencies with observed trends in the data. We find that the magnetic
model is slightly favored over the the hydrodynamic model, and note that this
3-Gauss kinematic magnetohydrodynamical GCM is also favored when compared to
low-resolution data. Future generation high-resolution spectrographs on
Extremely large telescopes (ELTs) will greatly increase signals and make
methods like these possible with higher precision and for a wider range of
objects.