3.8 μm Imaging of 400-600 K Brown Dwarfs and Orbital Constraints for WISEP J045853.90+643452.6AB

  • S. K. Leggett
  • , Trent J. Dupuy
  • , Caroline V. Morley
  • , Mark S. Marley
  • , William M.J. Best
  • , Michael C. Liu
  • , D. Apai
  • , S. L. Casewell
  • , T. R. Geballe
  • , John E. Gizis
  • , J. Sebastian Pineda
  • , Marcia Rieke
  • , G. S. Wright

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

18 Scopus citations

Abstract

Half of the energy emitted by late-T- A nd Y-type brown dwarfs emerges at 3.5 ≤ λ μm ≤ 5.5. We present new L′ (3.43 ≤ λ μm ≤ 4.11) photometry obtained at the Gemini North telescope for nine late-T and Y dwarfs, and synthesize L′ from spectra for an additional two dwarfs. The targets include two binary systems that were imaged at a resolution of 0.″25. One of these, WISEP J045853.90+643452.6AB, shows significant motion, and we present an astrometric analysis of the binary using Hubble Space Telescope, Keck Adaptive Optics, and Gemini images. We compare λ ∼ 4 μm observations to models, and find that the model fluxes are too low for brown dwarfs cooler than ∼700 K. The discrepancy increases with decreasing temperature, and is a factor of ∼2 at T eff = 500 K and ∼4 at T eff = 400 K. Warming the upper layers of a model atmosphere generates a spectrum closer to what is observed. The thermal structure of cool brown dwarf atmospheres above the radiative-convective boundary may not be adequately modeled using pure radiative equilibrium; instead heat may be introduced by thermochemical instabilities (previously suggested for the L-to T-type transition) or by breaking gravity waves (previously suggested for the solar system giant planets). One-dimensional models may not capture these atmospheres, which likely have both horizontal and vertical pressure/temperature variations.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number117
JournalAstrophysical Journal
Volume882
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 10 2019

Keywords

  • Astrometry-binaries: General-brown dwarfs-infrared: Stars-stars: Atmospheres

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Astronomy and Astrophysics
  • Space and Planetary Science

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