http://arxiv.org/abs/1612.03174
The formation mechanisms and chemical compositions of brown dwarfs likely span a diverse range. If they are formed predominantly in isolation by gravitational collapse like dwarf stars then their compositions might follow those of dwarf stars, spanning a relatively narrow range in metallicities (~ -0.4 to +0.4 dex) and predominantly oxygen-rich (C/O <~ 0.7). On the other hand, giant planets in the solar system are all super-solar in metallicity ([C/H] > 0.5~dex), which is thought to be a consequence of formation by core-accretion in a circumstellar disk. In this study we determine the atmospheric chemical compositions of three brown dwarfs and find them to be neither characteristic of dwarf stars nor giant planets. We derive high-precision atmospheric chemical abundances using high-S/N HST near-infrared spectra of three mid T Dwarfs which, together with two previously studied objects, display distinctly sub-solar metallicities and span C/O ratios of 0.4-1.0. These abundance patterns indicate either an old sub-stellar population and a multitude of formation environments or objects formed in circumstellar disks followed by ejection later. We show that for a simple synthetic model population of brown dwarfs with the same spectral-type as our sample the predicted age distribution is predominantly older than the Sun and, hence, more metal poor, consistent with our derived abundances. The diverse C/O ratios we find are indicative of either different chemical reservoirs in their formation environments or different formation pathways. Our results open the possibility that cool brown dwarfs may provide important probes of early galactic chemical evolution and inhomogeneity.
N. Madhusudhan, D. Apai and S. Gandhi
Tue, 13 Dec 16
23/77
Comments: Submitted to ApJ on Oct 5, 2016. Comments welcome
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