To the point:
- Ultrahot exoplanet, atmospheric differences: Researchers discovered clear differences in the atmosphere between the morning and evening sides of the ultrahot gas planet WASP-121 b using the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST).
- Temperature and chemical variations: The evening side absorbs more infrared light due to higher temperatures caused by strong winds moving heat eastward, while water molecules decrease in the evening terminator due to high temperatures breaking them apart.
- Planetary rotation and observation method: WASP-121 b’s synchronous rotation reveals different atmospheric regions during transit, allowing scientists to analyse changes in light absorption over time and longitude.
Confirmation of variations between dusk and dawn
With its unprecedented observational quality, JWST gives us the most detailed glimpses into distant planets to date: By measuring how star light absorption changes as WASP-121 b rotates, we probe its atmosphere longitude by longitude. Cyril Gapp, MPIA
The data indicate that the evening terminator absorbs more light than the morning side, consistent with the commonly accepted picture of powerful winds that transport intense heat from the day to the night side. Hot winds follow the planet’s rotation eastward, which heats the evening zone. With rising temperatures, this region is bound to expand, increasing the planet’s cross-section and allowing it to absorb stellar radiation more efficiently.
Besides a general slight reduction in brightness towards the end of the transit, the data obtained by JWST’s NIRSpec (Near-infrared spectrograph) instrument also reveal an increase in the carbon monoxide (CO) signal. However, this appears to be a temperature effect, not related to an increase in carbon monoxide molecules.
In contrast, the amount of water (H2O) in the atmosphere appears to drop, which the astronomers interpret as a real decrease in water molecules. The temperatures in the upper atmosphere are high enough to break water molecules into their constituents. This result again corroborates the existence of hot winds heating the evening terminator region.
Two extreme sides of an ultra-hot planet
“WASP-121 b is particularly extreme, with average temperatures on the dayside hemisphere being around 2770 Kelvin, while those on the nightside are closer to about 1000 Kelvin,” co-author Tom Evans-Soma from the University of Newcastle, Australia, explains. He previously determined the planet’s temperature range and is also affiliated with MPIA. These values translate to almost 2500 degrees Celsius, or about 4525 degrees Fahrenheit, on the dayside, and approximately 725 degrees Celsius, or 1340 degrees Fahrenheit, at night.
When astronomers observe such a planet transiting in front of a star, the planet rotates slightly between the points of ingress and egress, revealing different fractions of its atmosphere. While the planet mostly presents its night side, our point of view permits glimpses beyond the dusk and dawn towards the bright dayside, depending on the transit’s progress. The zone leading the planet’s orbit corresponds to the morning side, and the one trailing is the evening side.
Apart from recording the measured brightness variation over time, spectrographs break light into smaller components, which physicists call a spectrum, much as a prism produces a rainbow-like distribution of colours. Since atmospheric gases absorb light at distinct colours or wavelengths, a detailed analysis reveals their chemical composition.
Elapsed time converts to longitude
Astronomers usually average the measurements over the entire transit to achieve a clearer signal. However, to determine how the signal changes during the planet’s trajectory across the star, Gapp and his colleagues allowed for a temporal variation while the planet rotates. By applying statistical methods, they found that their procedure provides a significantly better fit to the data, indicating that they indeed detected a significant variation.
Notable gaps in atmospheric models
The astronomers suspected that cooling mechanisms at the morning terminator might be at work that the models didn’t account for. Previous studies have indicated that clouds may be present, albeit composed not of water droplets but of minerals such as silicates. Clouds can efficiently shield infrared light emitted from hot gaseous layers below, mimicking lower temperatures. Infamously, simulating the physics of clouds, condensation, and evaporation in a dynamic environment is hard. Therefore, physical models commonly applied to exoplanet atmospheres, such as the one used in this study, do not account for clouds, which can yield unrealistic results.
After tweaking the simulation to better approximate the effect of clouds on infrared radiation from deeper layers, the results were more consistent with observations. However, only more sophisticated models will be able to confidently confirm the presence of clouds.
A blueprint for future studies
Additional information
Other researchers were: Aurélien Falco (Sorbonne Université, Paris, France), David K. Sing (Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, USA), Shashank Dholakia (University of Queensland, St. Lucia, Australia), Vivien Parmentier (Université de la Côte d’Azur, Nice, France), Jérémy Leconte (Université Bordeaux, France), and Guangwei Fu (Johns Hopkins University).
The JWST observations used in this study were conducted as part of GO program #1729 (PI: Thomas Evans-Soma, Co-PI: Tiffany Kataria) titled “A NIRSpec Phase Curve for the ultrahot Jupiter WASP-121b” and GTO program #1201 (PI: David Lafreniere) labelled “NIRISS Exploration of the Atmospheric diversity of Transiting exoplanets (NEAT).”
NIRSpec (Near Infrared Spectrograph) was built by European industry to the European Space Agency’s (ESA) specifications and managed by the ESA JWST Project at ESTEC (European Space Research and Technology Centre), the Netherlands. The prime contractor was Airbus Defence and Space in Ottobrunn, Germany. MPIA contributed to the development and manufacture of NIRSpec’s filter and grating wheels. The NIRSpec detector and micro-shutter array subsystems were provided by NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC).
The James Webb Space Telescope is the world’s leading observatory for space research. It is an international programme led by NASA and its partners ESA and CSA (Canadian Space Agency).
Contacs:
Dr. Markus Nielbock
Press and outreach officer
Tel: +49 6221 528-134
Email: pr@mpia.de
MPIA press team
Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, Heidelberg, Germany
Cyril Gapp
Tel: +49 6221 528-328
Email: gapp@mpia.de
Cyril Gapp / MPIA
Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, Heidelberg, Germany
Dr. Thomas M. Evans-Soma
Tel: +61 2 4055-3229
Email: tom.evans-soma@newcastle.edu.au
Homepage Thomas Evans-Soma
School of Information and Physical Sciences, The University of Newcastle, Callaghan, Australia
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Heidelberg, Deutschland
Original publication
Cyril Gapp, Aurélien Falco, Thomas M. Evans-Soma, et al. (incl. Eva-Maria Ahrer)
Atmospheric asymmetries in WASP-121 b revealed by rotational transits detected with JWST
Nature Astronomy (2026). DOI: 10.1038/s41550-026-02887-6
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