- Kreidberg, Laura;
- Mollière, Paul;
- Crossfield, Ian JM;
- Thorngren, Daniel P;
- Kawashima, Yui;
- Morley, Caroline V;
- Benneke, Björn;
- Mikal-Evans, Thomas;
- Berardo, David;
- Kosiarek, Molly;
- Gorjian, Varoujan;
- Ciardi, David R;
- Christiansen, Jessie L;
- Dragomir, Diana;
- Dressing, Courtney D;
- Fortney, Jonathan J;
- Fulton, Benjamin J;
- Greene, Thomas P;
- Hardegree-Ullman, Kevin K;
- Howard, Andrew W;
- Howell, Steve B;
- Isaacson, Howard;
- Krick, Jessica E;
- Livingston, John H;
- Lothringer, Joshua D;
- Morales, Farisa Y;
- Petigura, Erik A;
- Rodriguez, Joseph E;
- Schlieder, Joshua E;
- Weiss, Lauren M
We present a transmission spectrum for the Neptune-size exoplanet HD 106315 c
from optical to infrared wavelengths based on transit observations from the
Hubble Space Telescope/Wide Field Camera 3, K2, and Spitzer. The spectrum shows
tentative evidence for a water absorption feature in the $1.1 - 1.7\mu$m
wavelength range with a small amplitude of 30 ppm (corresponding to just $0.8
\pm 0.04$ atmospheric scale heights). Based on an atmospheric retrieval
analysis, the presence of water vapor is tentatively favored with a Bayes
factor of 1.7 - 2.6 (depending on prior assumptions). The spectrum is most
consistent with either enhanced metallicity, high altitude condensates, or
both. Cloud-free solar composition atmospheres are ruled out at $>5\sigma$
confidence. We compare the spectrum to grids of cloudy and hazy forward models
and find that the spectrum is fit well by models with moderate cloud lofting or
haze formation efficiency, over a wide range of metallicities ($1 - 100\times$
solar). We combine the constraints on the envelope composition with an interior
structure model and estimate that the core mass fraction is $\gtrsim0.3$. With
a bulk composition reminiscent of that of Neptune and an orbital distance of
0.15 AU, HD 106315 c hints that planets may form out of broadly similar
material and arrive at vastly different orbits later in their evolution.