GeminiFocus 2013 Year in Review | Page 12

Figure 2. ics of these detectors were a big boon to our program. Spectroscopic light curves of WASP-12b (points) and best-fit models (lines) for the January 25th observations. The numbers on the left side give the wavelength range of the channels in units of nanometers. The so-called “white” light curves for WASP-12b — made from the Gemini data by summing over all of the wavelengths — is shown in Figure 1. The data exhibit an unexpected instrument systematic. The effect is correlated with the rotation angle of the Cassegrain instrument support structure. (Note that this angle changes smoothly over the course of a transit observation as the structure rotates to keep the GMOS slit mask aligned on the stars.) The origin of this effect is unknown and is currently being investigated. However, we found that it can be modeled (black lines in the top two panels of Figure 1) and removed from the data. Figure 3. Derived transmission spectrum of WASP-12b (blue circles with error bars) with the transit depth (left y-axis) and relative number of scale heights (right y-axis). The different lines represent different models for the planet’s atmosphere, and the diamonds are the models binned over the data bandpasses. The red line is a model with only hydrogen and potassium. The feature in this model at 0.775 micron is due to the potassium resonance doublet. The black line is a model for an atmosphere that has solar elemental abundances (i.e., oxygen rich). The gold line is a model with a carbonrich composition. optical (720 1008 nanometers [nm]) and -  took advantage of the new e2v deep depletion CCDs that had been installed in GMOS-N just a few months beforehand. The excellent red optical quantum efficiencies and cosmet- In Figure 2, we show the corrected highprecision spectroscopic light curves that we obtained with GMOS-N by binning the data for the first night over 15-nm-wide spectral channels. The measured transit depths vary as a function of wavelength; this gives us the planet’s transmission spectrum, which in turn, tells us about its atmospheric composition. The transmission spectrum of WASP-12b along with three atmospheric models is shown in Figure 3. The GMOS-N data rule out the possibility of an atmosphere with only hydrogen and potassium. For an oxygen-rich atmosphere, the data can be explained by the presence of metal oxides. However, the presence of metal hydrides in a carbon-rich atmosphere can also explain the data. 10 GeminiFocus 2013 Year in Review January2014