Title: HST PanCET program: A Cloudy Atmosphere for the promising JWST target WASP-101b Author: H.R. Wakeford, K.B. Stevenson, N.K. Lewis, D.K. Sing, M. López-Morales, M. Marley, T. Kataria, A. Mandell, G.E. Ballester, J. Barstow, L. Ben-Jaffel, V. Bourrier, L.A. Buchhave, D. Ehrenreich, T.M. Evans, A. García Munőz, G. Henry, H. Knutson, P. Lavvas, A. Lecavelier des Etangs, N. Nikolov, J. Sanz-Forcada
We present results from the first observations of the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Panchromatic Comparative Exoplanet Treasury (PanCET) program for WASP-101b, a highly inflated hot Jupiter and one of the community targets proposed for the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) Early Release Science (ERS) program. From a single HST Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) observation, we find that the near-infrared transmission spectrum of WASP-101b contains no significant H2O absorption features and we rule out a clear atmosphere at 13{\sigma}. Therefore, WASP-101b is not an optimum target for a JWST ERS program aimed at observing strong molecular transmission features. We compare WASP-101b to the well studied and nearly identical hot Jupiter WASP-31b. These twin planets show similar temperature-pressure profiles and atmospheric features in the near-infrared. We suggest exoplanets in the same parameter space as WASP-101b and WASP-31b will also exhibit cloudy transmission spectral features. For future HST exoplanet studies, our analysis also suggests that a lower count limit needs to be exceeded per pixel on the detector in order to avoid unwanted instrumental systematics.