Spectrum of an Exoplanet

The Webb Space Telescope was able to collect an absorption spectrum of the atmosphere of the large exoplanet WASP-96 b as it transited across the central star. The graph indicates the presence of water vapor, which is evidence that the planet had clouds, which were once thought not to exist there, NASA explained. Since water is presumed necessary for any kind of life, this was of great interest. It also demonstrated Webb's unprecedented ability to analyze atmospheres hundreds of light-years away.

Credits: IMAGE: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, Joseph Olmsted (STScI)

This is a simulation of the type of spectrum which might be collected from and Earth-like planet with the atmospheric constituents that would be associated with the existence of life on the planet. The data would be collected when the starlight passes through the atmosphere of an Earth-like exoplanet. As the exoplanet moves in front of the star, some of the starlight is absorbed by the gas in that exoplanet's atmosphere and some is transmitted through it. Each element or molecule in the atmosphere's gas absorbs light at a very specific pattern of wavelengths. This creates a spectrum with dips that show where the wavelengths of light are absorbed, as seen in the graph. Each dip is like a "signature" of that element or molecule. The transmission spectrum of an Earth-like planet's atmosphere shows wavelengths of starlight that molecules like the oxygen that we breathe, ozone, water, carbon dioxide, and methane absorb.

NASA's James Webb Space Telescope will be able to detect some of the most prominent absorption features of certain gas molecules. Even these features will be extremely faint. The more light Webb gathers while looking at the passing planet's atmosphere, the more confidently scientists can identify these features.

References:

Exoplanet spectrum from the Webb Telescope.

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James Webb orbit

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