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JWST NIRSpec finds no clear signs of an atmosphere on TOI-1685 b

JWST NIRSpec finds no clear signs of an atmosphere on TOI-1685 b
JWST NIRSpec finds no clear signs of an atmosphere on TOI-1685 b
Determining the prevalence of atmospheres on terrestrial planets is a core objective in exoplanetary science. While M dwarf systems offer a promising opportunity, conclusive observations of terrestrial atmospheres have remained elusive, with many yielding flat transmission spectra. We observe four transits of the hot terrestrial planet TOI-1685 b using JWST's NIRSpec G395H instrument. Combining this with the transit from the previously-observed phase curve of the planet with the same instrument, we perform a detailed analysis to determine the possibility of an atmosphere on TOI-1685 b. From our retrievals, the Bayesian evidence favours a simple flat line model, indicating no evidence for an atmosphere on TOI-1685 b, in line with results from the phase curve analysis. Our results show that hydrogen-dominated atmospheres can be confidently ruled out. For heavier, secondary atmospheres we find a lower limit on the mean molecular weight of ~10, at a significance of ~5 sigma. Pure CO2, SO2, H2O, and CH4 atmospheres, or a mixed secondary atmosphere (CO+CO2+SO2) could explain the data (Delta lnZ < 3). However, pure CH4 atmospheres may be physically unlikely, and the pure H2O and CO2 cases require a high-altitude cloud, which could also be interpreted as a thin cloud-free atmosphere. We discuss the theoretical possibility for different types of atmosphere on this planet, and consider the effects of atmospheric escape and stellar activity on the system. Though we find that TOI-1685 b is likely a bare rock, this study also highlights the challenges of detecting secondary atmospheres on rocky planets with JWST.
astro-ph.EP
1365-2966
Fisher, Chloe E.
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Hooton, Matthew J.
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Gressier, Amélie
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Zgraggen, Merlin
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Tian, Meng
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Heng, Kevin
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Allen, Natalie H.
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Chatterjee, Richard D.
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Morris, Brett M.
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Borsato, Nicholas W.
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Espinoza, Néstor
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Kitzmann, Daniel
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Meier, Tobias G.
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Buchhave, Lars A.
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Burgasser, Adam J.
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Demory, Brice-Olivier
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Fortune, Mark
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Hoeijmakers, H. Jens
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Luque, Raphael
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Valdés, Erik A. Meier
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Mendonça, João M.
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Prinoth, Bibiana
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Rathcke, Alexander D.
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Taylor, Jake
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et al.
Fisher, Chloe E.
49bd98ef-0c36-4b65-abb1-c7d0ed8e1b95
Hooton, Matthew J.
1a02a04a-3a14-41a4-989f-f0ed6bb860b8
Gressier, Amélie
193b18ed-073d-425a-8bad-26b289160a6c
Zgraggen, Merlin
a6511767-4d7f-4d1a-9620-5e258b91993c
Tian, Meng
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Heng, Kevin
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Allen, Natalie H.
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Chatterjee, Richard D.
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Morris, Brett M.
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Borsato, Nicholas W.
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Espinoza, Néstor
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Kitzmann, Daniel
af1659b8-c27f-4d1b-b7a2-afaeb944af07
Meier, Tobias G.
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Buchhave, Lars A.
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Burgasser, Adam J.
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Demory, Brice-Olivier
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Fortune, Mark
42398d12-dc72-42d2-a71f-fa275ef488f6
Hoeijmakers, H. Jens
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Luque, Raphael
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Valdés, Erik A. Meier
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Mendonça, João M.
cb29fe08-eb94-4fad-8eba-eac1c5de491b
Prinoth, Bibiana
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Rathcke, Alexander D.
4f2c25a8-9c69-48fb-b6b9-46f3738ed40c
Taylor, Jake
be3908fb-3f46-4d9a-b743-349eb1e52a67

Fisher, Chloe E., Hooton, Matthew J. and Gressier, Amélie , et al. (2026) JWST NIRSpec finds no clear signs of an atmosphere on TOI-1685 b. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 545 (4), [staf2187]. (doi:10.1093/mnras/staf2187).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Determining the prevalence of atmospheres on terrestrial planets is a core objective in exoplanetary science. While M dwarf systems offer a promising opportunity, conclusive observations of terrestrial atmospheres have remained elusive, with many yielding flat transmission spectra. We observe four transits of the hot terrestrial planet TOI-1685 b using JWST's NIRSpec G395H instrument. Combining this with the transit from the previously-observed phase curve of the planet with the same instrument, we perform a detailed analysis to determine the possibility of an atmosphere on TOI-1685 b. From our retrievals, the Bayesian evidence favours a simple flat line model, indicating no evidence for an atmosphere on TOI-1685 b, in line with results from the phase curve analysis. Our results show that hydrogen-dominated atmospheres can be confidently ruled out. For heavier, secondary atmospheres we find a lower limit on the mean molecular weight of ~10, at a significance of ~5 sigma. Pure CO2, SO2, H2O, and CH4 atmospheres, or a mixed secondary atmosphere (CO+CO2+SO2) could explain the data (Delta lnZ < 3). However, pure CH4 atmospheres may be physically unlikely, and the pure H2O and CO2 cases require a high-altitude cloud, which could also be interpreted as a thin cloud-free atmosphere. We discuss the theoretical possibility for different types of atmosphere on this planet, and consider the effects of atmospheric escape and stellar activity on the system. Though we find that TOI-1685 b is likely a bare rock, this study also highlights the challenges of detecting secondary atmospheres on rocky planets with JWST.

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Accepted/In Press date: 5 December 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 12 December 2025
Published date: 8 January 2026
Keywords: astro-ph.EP

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 511780
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/511780
ISSN: 1365-2966
PURE UUID: 9cef6a74-0e0b-45a6-a7d9-f60117656ef0
ORCID for João M. Mendonça: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6907-4476

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Date deposited: 02 Jun 2026 16:41
Last modified: 03 Jun 2026 02:11

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Contributors

Author: Chloe E. Fisher
Author: Matthew J. Hooton
Author: Amélie Gressier
Author: Merlin Zgraggen
Author: Meng Tian
Author: Kevin Heng
Author: Natalie H. Allen
Author: Richard D. Chatterjee
Author: Brett M. Morris
Author: Nicholas W. Borsato
Author: Néstor Espinoza
Author: Daniel Kitzmann
Author: Tobias G. Meier
Author: Lars A. Buchhave
Author: Adam J. Burgasser
Author: Brice-Olivier Demory
Author: Mark Fortune
Author: H. Jens Hoeijmakers
Author: Raphael Luque
Author: Erik A. Meier Valdés
Author: João M. Mendonça ORCID iD
Author: Bibiana Prinoth
Author: Alexander D. Rathcke
Author: Jake Taylor
Corporate Author: et al.

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