ELemental abundances of Planets and brown dwarfs Imaged around Stars (ELPIS). I. Potential Metal Enrichment of the Exoplanet AF Lep b and a Novel Retrieval Approach for Cloudy Self-luminous Atmospheres
Fortney, Jonathan J.; Carter, Aarynn L.; Skemer, Andrew; Hawkins, Keith; Marley, Mark S.; Mollière, Paul; Morley, Caroline V.; Bowler, Brendan P.; Franson, Kyle; Zhang, Zhoujian; Maas, Zachary G.; Sneden, Christopher; Manea, Catherine
United States, Germany
Abstract
AF Lep A+b is a remarkable planetary system hosting a gas-giant planet that has the lowest dynamical mass among directly imaged exoplanets. We present an in-depth analysis of the atmospheric composition of the star and planet to probe the planet's formation pathway. Based on new high-resolution spectroscopy of AF Lep A, we measure a uniform set of stellar parameters and elemental abundances (e.g., [Fe/H] = -0.27 ± 0.31 dex). The planet's dynamical mass ( ${2.8}_{-0.5}^{+0.6}$ M Jup) and orbit are also refined using published radial velocities, relative astrometry, and absolute astrometry. We use petitRADTRANS to perform chemically consistent atmospheric retrievals for AF Lep b. The radiative-convective equilibrium temperature profiles are incorporated as parameterized priors on the planet's thermal structure, leading to a robust characterization for cloudy self-luminous atmospheres. This novel approach is enabled by constraining the temperature-pressure profiles via the temperature gradient $(d\mathrm{ln}T/d\mathrm{ln}P)$ , a departure from previous studies that solely modeled the temperature. Through multiple retrievals performed on different portions of the 0.9-4.2 μm spectrophotometry, along with different priors on the planet's mass and radius, we infer that AF Lep b likely possesses a metal-enriched atmosphere ([Fe/H] > 1.0 dex). AF Lep b's potential metal enrichment may be due to planetesimal accretion, giant impacts, and/or core erosion. The first process coincides with the debris disk in the system, which could be dynamically excited by AF Lep b and lead to planetesimal bombardment. Our analysis also determines T eff ≈ 800 K, $\mathrm{log}(g)\approx 3.7$ dex, and the presence of silicate clouds and disequilibrium chemistry in the atmosphere. Straddling the L/T transition, AF Lep b is thus far the coldest exoplanet with suggested evidence of silicate clouds.