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From Twilight to Dawn: Exploring the Science Behind the Night

June 10, 2026
in Athmospheric
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From Twilight to Dawn: Exploring the Science Behind the Night — Athmospheric

From Twilight to Dawn: Exploring the Science Behind the Night

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Astronomers have unlocked new details about the exotic atmosphere of WASP-121 b, an ultra-hot gas giant exoplanet, revealing stark atmospheric contrasts between its morning and evening terminators. This breakthrough detection was achieved using the unparalleled sensitivity of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), marking a milestone in exoplanet atmospheric studies and providing concrete confirmation of theoretical predictions concerning atmospheric asymmetries on tidally locked gas giants. The findings emerge from a detailed analysis of infrared light absorption as the planet transits its host star, allowing scientists to map temperature and chemical composition variations with unprecedented precision.

WASP-121 b belongs to a class of exoplanets known as hot Jupiters, gas giants orbiting perilously close to their stars. Its proximity results in tidal locking—the synchronous rotation where one hemisphere permanently faces the star while the opposite side remains shrouded in near-freezing darkness. This unique dynamic creates sharply defined day/night hemispheres with temperature differentials reaching thousands of degrees Celsius. Daytime skies on WASP-121 b blaze at nearly 2770 Kelvin (approx. 2500°C), while the nightside cools dramatically to about 1000 Kelvin (approx. 725°C), a difference capable of fundamentally shaping atmospheric dynamics and chemistry.

The research team, led by Cyril Gapp of the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy (MPIA), leveraged JWST’s Near Infrared Spectrograph (NIRSpec) to analyze the planet as it passed in front of its star. By measuring variations in the starlight filtered through the planet’s atmosphere along a transit and correlating them with the planet’s rotation, the scientists discerned more than mere average brightness dips. Instead, they detected distinct asymmetries in infrared absorption between the morning and evening terminators—boundaries marking the transitions between day and night sides—as the planet rotated about 30 degrees during the transit.

Detailed spectral analyses revealed that the evening terminator’s atmosphere absorbs significantly more stellar infrared radiation than the morning side. This bespoke absorption pattern aligns precisely with expectations from robust eastward winds that transport intense daytime heat toward the night hemisphere. These winds elevate atmospheric temperatures on the evening side, causing its gaseous layers to expand and increase its effective cross-sectional area occulting the star. This expanded atmosphere thus filters more infrared light, resulting in the observed enhanced absorption signature.

Interestingly, while the carbon monoxide (CO) absorption feature intensifies towards the evening terminator, the researchers attribute this to temperature-related shifts in molecular excitation rather than an increase in CO molecule abundance. Conversely, the water vapor (H₂O) signature diminishes markedly on the evening side, indicating genuine molecular depletion. Scientists interpret this as photodissociation driven by extreme temperatures breaking water molecules into hydrogen and oxygen, a hallmark of ultra-hot planetary atmospheres subjected to relentless stellar irradiation.

The innovative approach exploited the planet’s tidally locked nature to parse atmospheric composition with longitudinal specificity—a refined spectroscopic “longitude scan” rarely attainable for exoplanets. Traditionally, transit observations amalgamate data over ingress to egress, masking subtle spatial differences. Here, accounting for the planet’s rotation mid-transit provided richer insights and improved model fits, affirming genuine asymmetries due to localized physical phenomena rather than observational noise.

However, when researchers compared these observations to advanced atmospheric circulation models simulating heat distribution, some discrepancies arose. Specifically, the observed amplitude of variation surpassed theoretical predictions, hinting at missing or underestimated mechanisms modulating the atmospheric properties. One plausible explanation relates to the presence of mineral clouds—composed of silicates and other condensates—that preferentially form on the cooler morning terminator. Clouds can efficiently absorb or scatter infrared radiation, complicating measurements by masking hotter, deeper layers and suppressing apparent emission. Incorporating these cloud effects into models brought simulations into closer harmony with JWST’s unprecedented data.

The study exemplifies the extraordinary capabilities of the JWST in unveiling detailed atmospheric physics in distant exoplanets, heralding a new era of precision exoplanetology. By characterizing longitudinal structure across terminator zones, scientists can now probe global circulation patterns, chemistry, and cloud formation in worlds vastly different from those in our solar system. These insights shed light not only on atmospheric dynamics under extreme irradiation but also on planetary formation and evolution processes.

Moreover, this approach provides a blueprint for future investigations targeting similar ultra-hot gas giants within optimal temperature and rotation regimes. Expanding such longitudinal studies to a broader exoplanet sample will enable comparative atmospheric climatology, revealing whether WASP-121 b’s asymmetries are unique or reflect widespread characteristics among tidally locked hot Jupiters. Unlocking this diversity will advance understanding of atmospheric escape, chemistry, and heat transport mechanisms under conditions alien to our own planetary neighborhood.

WASP-121 b’s case also spotlights challenges in exoplanet atmospheric modeling, emphasizing the importance of incorporating cloud microphysics and non-equilibrium chemistry alongside thermal and dynamical factors. Robust, multi-dimensional models capturing these intricacies are necessary to interpret forthcoming JWST data accurately and to unravel the interplay of radiative transfer, chemical kinetics, and fluid dynamics shaping these extreme atmospheres. Future observational campaigns supported by enhanced modeling will ultimately refine our ability to reconstruct exoplanet atmospheric compositions with confidence.

In summary, this compelling research not only confirms predicted asymmetrical atmospheric structures on a tidally locked ultra-hot Jupiter but also highlights the nuanced complexity of exoplanet atmospheres revealed through state-of-the-art infrared transit spectroscopy. The successful detection and characterization of the dawn-dusk differences on WASP-121 b showcase cutting-edge exoplanet science propelled by JWST’s capabilities, affirming its vital role in decoding the secrets of distant worlds and their climates.


Subject of Research: Not applicable

Article Title: Atmospheric asymmetries in WASP-121 b revealed by rotational transits detected with JWST

News Publication Date: 10-Jun-2026

Web References: http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41550-026-02887-6

References: Nature Astronomy journal, DOI: 10.1038/s41550-026-02887-6

Image Credits: Patricia Klein and MPIA

Keywords: WASP-121 b, ultra-hot Jupiter, exoplanet atmosphere, atmospheric asymmetry, JWST, NIRSpec, tidally locked, infrared transit spectroscopy, atmospheric dynamics, hot Jupiters

Tags: atmospheric asymmetry in tidally locked planetschemical composition mapping of exoplanet atmospheresday-night temperature contrast on exoplanetsexoplanet atmospheric dynamics researchexoplanet infrared spectroscopyexoplanet transit light analysisextreme temperature variations on hot Jupitershot Jupiter temperature differencesJames Webb Space Telescope exoplanet observationstidal locking effects on exoplanetsultra-hot gas giant exoplanetWASP-121 b atmospheric study
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