A New Spectral Library for Modeling the Surfaces of Hot, Rocky Exoplanets
Abstract
JWST's MIRI LRS provides the first opportunity to spectroscopically characterize the surface compositions of close-in terrestrial exoplanets. Models for the bare-rock spectra of these planets often utilize a spectral library from R. Hu et al., which is based on room-temperature reflectance measurements of materials that represent archetypes of rocky planet surfaces. Here we present an expanded library that includes hemispherical reflectance measurements for a greater variety of compositions, varying textures (solid slab, coarsely crushed, and fine powder), as well as high-temperature (500–800 K) emissivity measurements for select samples. We incorporate this new library into version 6.3 of the open-source retrieval package PLATON and use it to show that planetary surfaces with similar compositions can have widely varying albedos and surface temperatures. We additionally demonstrate that changing the texture of a material can significantly alter its albedo, making albedo a poor proxy for surface composition. We identify key spectral features—the 5.6 μm olivine feature, the transparency feature, the Si-O stretching feature, and the Christiansen feature—that indicate silicate abundance and surface texture. We quantify the number of JWST observations needed to detect these features in the spectrum of the most favorable super-Earth target, LHS 3844 b, and revisit the interpretation of its Spitzer photometry. Lastly, we show that temperature-dependent changes in spectral features are likely undetectable at the precision of current exoplanet observations. Our results illustrate the importance of spectroscopically resolved thermal emission measurements, as distinct from surface albedo constraints, for characterizing the surface compositions of hot, rocky exoplanets.
Copyright and License
© 2025. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society.
Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 licence. Any further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation and DOI.
Acknowledgement
This research was carried out at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory and the California Institute of Technology under a contract with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and funded through the President's and Director's Research & Development Fund Program. H.A.K. and K.P. also gratefully acknowledge funding support from the Caltech Center for Comparative Planetary Evolution. K.P. thanks Paul Asimow, Claire Bucholz, Ken Farley, Shane Houchin, William Lawrence, Juliet Ryan-Davis, Ed Stolper, and Oliver Wilner for shaping our rock library by providing their geological expertise and/or samples, and Nick Anderson, Thomas Bailey, Rachael Danyew, Mark Garcia, Rebecca Greenberger, Martin Mendez, Zachariah Milby, Yuyu Phua, and Morgan Saidel for lending a hand with sample preparation and/or shipment.
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Additional details
- Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- President's and Director's Research & Development Fund Program -
- National Aeronautics and Space Administration
- California Institute of Technology
- Caltech Center for Comparative Planetary Evolution -
- Accepted
-
2025-01-08Accepted
- Available
-
2025-03-04Published
- Caltech groups
- Caltech Center for Comparative Planetary Evolution, Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences (GPS)
- Publication Status
- Published