Self-consistent Models of Y Dwarf Atmospheres with Water Clouds and Disequilibrium Chemistry [EPA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2303.16295


Y dwarfs are the coolest spectral class of brown dwarf. They have effective temperatures less than 500 K, with the coolest detection as low as ~250 K. Their spectra are shaped predominantly by gaseous water, methane, and ammonia. At the warmer end of the Y dwarf temperature range, spectral signatures of disequilibrium carbon monoxide have been observed. Cooler Y dwarfs could host water clouds in their atmospheres. Since they make up the low-mass tail of the star formation process, and are a valuable analogue to the atmospheres of giant gaseous exoplanets in a temperature range that is difficult to observe, understanding Y dwarf atmospheric compositions and processes will both deepen our understanding of planet and star formation, and provide a stepping stone towards characterizing cool exoplanets. JWST spectral observations are anticipated to provide an unprecedented level of detail for these objects, and yet published self-consistent model grids do not accurately replicate even the existing HST and ground-based observations. In this work, we present a new suite of 1-d radiative-convective equilibrium models to aid in the characterization of Y dwarf atmospheres and spectra. We compute clear, cloudy, equilibrium-chemistry and disequilibrium-chemistry models, providing a comprehensive suite of models in support of the impending JWST era of panchromatic Y dwarf characterization. Comparing these models against current observations, we find that disequilibrium CH4-CO and NH3-N2 chemistry and the presence of water clouds can bring models and observations into better, though still not complete, agreement.

Read this paper on arXiv…

B. Lacy and A. Burrows
Thu, 30 Mar 23
14/66

Comments: main text: 27 pages, 19 figures, 4 tables; appendix + references: 13 pages, 3 figures, 4 tables; model grid available on zenodo this https URL