Title: Cloudy with a Chance of Iron
1Cloudy with a Chance of Iron
Clouds and Weather onBrown Dwarfs
2 Andy Ackerman Mark MarleyNASA Ames
J. Davy KirkpatrickCaltech/IPAC
Didier SaumonLos Alamos NL
Katharina LoddersWashington University
3Summary (i.e., what Ill try to convince you of!)
- Cool brown dwarf atmospheres have the right
conditions to form condensates or dust. - Observations support the idea that these
condensates form cloud structures. - Cloud structures are probably not uniform, likely
disrupted by atmospheric turbulence. - Clouds have significant effects on the spectral
energy distributions of these objects and
analogues (e.g., Extra-solar giant planets).
4What are Brown Dwarfs?
Failed stars objects that form like stars but
have insufficient mass to sustain H
fusion. Super-Jupiters objects with similar
size and atmospheric constituents as giant
planets, but form as stars.
5Brown Dwarfs
Stellar evolution
(1)
(2)
- Adiabatic contraction (Hayashi tracks)
- Ignition, formation of radiative core, heating
dynamic equilibrium (Henyey tracks) - Settle onto Hydrogen main sequence radiative
equilibrium
(3)
Hayashi (1965)
6Brown Dwarfs
PPI chain p p ? d e ?e, Tc 3 ? 106 K
Below 0.1 M?, e- degeneracy becomes significant
in interior (Pcore 105 Mbar, Tcore TFermi)
and will inhibit collapse. Below 0.075 M?,
Tcore remains below critical PPI temperature ?
Cannot sustain core H fusion.
Kumar (1963)
7Brown Dwarfs
With no fusion source, Brown dwarfs rapidly
evolve to lower Teff and lower luminosities.
cool off inexorably like dying embers plucked
from a fire. A. Burrows
8Some Brown Dwarf Properties
- Interior conditions ?core 10-1000 g/cm3, Tcore
104-106 K, Pcore 105 Mbar, fully convective,
largely degenerate (90 of volume),
predominantly metallic H (exotic?). - Atmosphere conditions Pphot 1-10 bar, Tphot
3000 K and lower. - All evolved brown dwarfs have R 1 RJupiter.
- Age/Mass degeneracy old, massive BDs have same
Teff, L as young, low-mass BDs. - Below Teff 1800 K, all objects are substellar.
- NBD N, MBD 0.15 M
9Why Brown Dwarfs Matter
- Former dark matter candidates - no longer the
case. - Important and populous members of the Solar
Neighborhood. - End case of star formation, test of formation
scenarios at/below MJeans. - Tracers of star formation history and chemical
evolution in the Galaxy. - Analogues to Extra-solar Giant Planets (EGPs),
more easily studied. - Last source of stars in distant future of
non-collapsing Universe - Adams Laughlin (RvMP,
69, 337, 1997).
10M, L, and T dwarfs
Three spectral classes encompass Brown Dwarfs
M dwarfs (3800-2100 K) Young BDs and low-mass
stars. L dwarfs (2100-1300 K) BDs and very
low-mass, old stars. T dwarfs (lt 1300 K)
All BDs coolest objects known.
11M, L, and T dwarfs
M dwarfs are dominated by TiO, VO, H2O, CO
absorption plus metal/alkali lines. L dwarfs
replace oxides with hydrides (FeH, CrH, MgH, CaH)
and alkalis are prominent. T dwarfs exhibit
strong CH4 and H2O and extremely broadened Na I
and K I.
12Condensation in BD Atmospheres
- At the atmospheric temperatures and pressures of
late-M and L dwarfs, many gaseous species are
capable of forming condensates. - e.g.
- TiO ? TiO2(s), CaTiO3(s)
- VO ? VO(s)
- Fe ? Fe(l)
- SiO ? SiO2(s), MgSiO3(s)
Marley et al. (2002)
13Evidence for Condensation - Spectroscopy
- Relatively weak H2O bands in NIR compared to
models require additional smooth opacity source. - The disappearance of TiO and VO from late-M to L
can be directly attributed to their accumulation
onto condensate species.
Kirkpatrick et al. (1999)
14Evidence for Condensation - Photometry
The NIR colors of late-type M and L dwarfs are
progressively redder can only be matched by
models that allow dust formation in their
atmospheres. However, bluer colors of T dwarfs
require a transparent atmosphere dust must be
removed.
Dusty
Gliese 229B
Cond
Chabrier et al. (2000)
15Evidence for Rainout - Abundances
L
T
Without the rainout of dust species, Na and K
would form Feldspars and atomic species would be
depleted in the late L dwarfs.
Burrows et al. (2002)
16Evidence for Rainout - Abundances
L
T
With rainout, Na and K persist well into the T
dwarf regime.
Burrows et al. (2002)
17Evidence for Rainout - Abundances
K I (and Na I) absorption is clearly present in
the T dwarfs ? dust species must be removed from
photosphere.
Burgasser et al. (2002)
18Cloudy Models for BD Atmospheres
- Condensate clouds dominate visual appearance and
spectrum of every Solar giant planet likely
important for brown dwarfs. - Condensates in planetary atmospheres are
generally found in cloud structures. - Requires self-consistent treatment of condensable
particle formation, growth, and sedimentation. - Ackerman Marley (2001) Marley et al. (2002)
Tsuji (2002) Cooper et al. (2003) Helling et
al. (2001) Woitke Helling (2003)
19Basics of the Cloudy Model
- Simple treatment assume transport of dust by
diffusion and gravitational settling. - Horizontal homogeneity.
- No chemical mixing between clouds.
20What is frain?
- If L, qc/qt constant, scale height
- frain 0 ? dusty atmosphere.
- frain ? 8 ? clear atmosphere.
- Earth frain 0.5 (stratocumulus) 4 (cumulus).
- Jupiter frain 1-3 (NH3 clouds).
qt(z) q0 exp(- frain qc/qt w/? z)
21What is frain?
frain determines extent of cloud, particle size
distribution, and hence cloud opacity.
Ackerman Marley (2001)
22Basics of the Cloudy Model
The cloud layer is generally confined to a narrow
range of temperatures ? for cooler BDs, cloud
will reside below the photosphere.
Ackerman Marley (2001)
23Basics of the Cloudy Model
L5
Condensate cloud may or may not influence
spectrum of brown dwarf depending on its
temperature explains disappearance of dust in T
dwarfs.
L8
T5
Ackerman Marley (2001)
24Cloudy Model Results
- Accurately predicts M/L dwarf colors down to
latest-type L dwarfs. - Matches turnover in near-infrared colors in T
dwarfs. - Cannot explain J-band brightening across L/T
transition.
dusty
clear
cloudy, frain 3
Burgasser et al. (2002)
25The Transition L ? T
- Dramatic shift in NIR color (?J-K 2).
- Dramatic change in spectral morphology.
- Loss of condensates from the photosphere.
- Objects brighten at 1 mm.
- Apparently narrow temperature range Gl
584C (L8) 1300 K
2MASS 0559 (T5) 1200 K.
26CondensateClouds
Clouds are not uniform!
27At 5 ?m, holes in Jupiters NH3 clouds produce
Hot Spots that dominate emergent flux ?
horizontal structure important!
IRTF NSFCam 1995 July 26 c.f., Westphal,
Matthews, Terrile (1974)
28Evidence for Cloud Disruption - Theory
2D models of dust formation in BD atmospheres
predict patchiness due to turbulence and rapid
accumulation of condensate material.
Number density
Mean particle size
Helling et al. (2001)
29Evidence for Cloud Disruption -
Variability
Many late-type L and T dwarfs are variable, P
hours, similar to dust formation
rate. Atmospheres too cold to maintain magnetic
spots ? clouds likely. Periods are not generally
stable ? rapid surface evolution.
Enoch, Brown, Burgasser (2003)
30Evidence for Cloud Disruption -
Spectroscopy
Strengthening of K I higher-order lines around
1?m ? reduced opacity at these wavelengths from
late L to T.
Burgasser et al. (2002)
31Evidence for Cloud Disruption -
Spectroscopy
Reappearance of condensate species progenitors
(e.g., FeH) ? detected below cloud deck.
Burgasser et al. (2002)
32Evidence for Cloud Disruption -
Spectroscopy
Presence of CO in Gliese 229Bs atmosphere
16,000x LTE abundance ? upwelling convective
motion.
Oppenheimer et al. (1998)
33A Partly Cloudy Model for BD Atmospheres
- An exploratory model.
- Linear interpolation of fluxes and P/T profiles
of cloudy and clear atmospheric models. - New parameter is cloud coverage percentage
(0-100). - Burgasser et al. (2002), ApJ, 571, L151
34Wavelength Matters!
z
J
K
I
1400 K
FeH
K I
Relative brightening at z and J (1 ?m) can be
explained by holes in the clouds.
35Success?
Cloud disruption allows transition to brighter T
dwarfs. Requires very rapid rainout at L/T
transition, around 1200 K. Data fits, model is
physically motivated, but is it a unique solution?
Burgasser et al. (2002)
36Arguments Against the Model
- Small numbers of objects with parallaxes, could
be a statistical fluke. - Recent parallaxes for 10-20 late-L/early-T show
identical trends brightening is real. - Early T dwarfs could be young, late L dwarfs old.
- Fairly tight trend, some T dwarf companions are
known to be old, some late L dwarf companions
known to be young. - May indicate different sedimentation efficiencies
in different objects. - Fit for L dwarfs is excellent for frain 3,
would require a rapid shift in atmospheric
dynamics partial clouding is simpler.
37Extrasolar Planet Weather?
- 3D Hydrodynamic models of hot EGP atmospheres
produce vertical winds/structure. - Weak Na I in HD 209458b high clouds?
- Presence of clouds affects detectability of EGPs.
Showman Guillot (2002)
Charbonneau et al. (2002)
38More Work is Needed!!
- More data across L/T transition needed new
discoveries (SDSS, 2MASS), distance measurements
(USNO), better photometry. - Development of a fully self-consistent model
convective motions, cloud disruption can be
drawn from terrestrial/Jovian studies. - What are the cloud structures - Bands? Spots?
- How do rotation, composition, age influence
transition?
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