Bibcode
Goldman, B.; Cushing, M. C.; Marley, M. S.; Artigau, É.; Baliyan, K. S.; Béjar, V. J. S.; Caballero, J. A.; Chanover, N.; Connelley, M.; Doyon, R.; Forveille, T.; Ganesh, S.; Gelino, C. R.; Hammel, H. B.; Holtzman, J.; Joshi, S.; Joshi, U. C.; Leggett, S. K.; Liu, M. C.; Martín, E. L.; Mohan, V.; Nadeau, D.; Sagar, R.; Stephens, D.
Referencia bibliográfica
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 487, Issue 1, 2008, pp.277-292
Fecha de publicación:
8
2008
Revista
Número de citas
29
Número de citas referidas
26
Descripción
Context: L-type ultra-cool dwarfs and brown dwarfs have cloudy
atmospheres that could host weather-like phenomena. The detection of
photometric or spectral variability would provide insight into
unresolved atmospheric heterogeneities, such as holes in a global cloud
deck. Indeed, a number of ultra-cool dwarfs have been reported to vary.
Additional time-resolved spectral observations of brown dwarfs offer the
opportunity for further constraining and characterising atmospheric
variability. Aims: It has been proposed that growth of
heterogeneities in the global cloud deck may account for the L- to
T-type transition when brown dwarf photospheres evolve from cloudy to
clear conditions. Such a mechanism is compatible with variability. We
searched for variability in the spectra of five L6 to T6 brown dwarfs to
test this hypothesis. Methods: We obtained spectroscopic time
series using the near-infrared spectrographs ISAAC on VLT-ANTU, over
0.99-1.13 μm, and SpeX on the Infrared Telescope Facility for two of
our targets in the J, H, and K bands. We searched for statistically
variable lines and for a correlation between those. Results: High
spectral-frequency variations are seen in some objects, but these
detections are marginal and need to be confirmed. We find no evidence of
large-amplitude variations in spectral morphology and we place firm
upper limits of 2 to 3% on broad-band variability, depending on the
targets and wavelengths, on the time scale of a few hours. In contrast
to the rest of the sample, the T2 transition brown dwarf SDSS J1254-0122
shows numerous variable features, but a secure variability diagnosis
would require further observations. Conclusions: Assuming that any
variability arises from the rotation of patterns of large-scale clear
and cloudy regions across the surface, we find that the typical physical
scale of cloud-cover disruption should be smaller than 5-8% of the disk
area for four of our targets, using simplistic heterogeneous atmospheric
models. The possible variations seen in SDSS J1254-0122 are not strong
enough to allow us to confirm the cloud-breaking hypothesis.
Based on observations obtained at the European Observatory, Paranal,
Chile, under programme 71.C-0559.
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