Dust in the Atmospheres of Brown
Dust in the Atmospheres of Brown Dwarfs and Young Planets:
the Effects of Gravitational Settling and Convective Overshoot
D. Homeier1, H.-G. Ludwig2, F. Allard3,
P. Hauschildt4 & M. Dehn4
1Institut für Astrophysik, Universität Göttingen,
Germany
2Observatoire de Paris-Meudon, Paris, France
3Centre de Recherche Astronomique de Lyon,
École Normale Supérieure, Lyon, France
4Hamburger Sternwarte, Universität Hamburg, Germany
Dwarfs of the spectral types late-M, L and T span mass
regimes from very-low-mass stars over brown dwarfs down to young
planetary objects.
They all show massive molecular line-blanketing and the condensation
of refractory species
with decreasing Teff, leading to changes in chemical
equilibrium composition and absorption due to dust grains.
The spectral evolution from late-M over L to mid- and late-T classes
is now understood as chiefly due to increasing amounts of
condensates in the visible photosphere up to mid-L types,
and the settling of dust clouds into deeper regions at the transition
from L to T, resulting in a depletion of condensable elements
in the upper atmosphere. The ensuing photospheric cooling is
also driving a change in carbon chemistry leading to the hallmark
methane absorption features of T dwarfs.
Recent observations of brown dwarfs in the L-T spectral sequence
and model atmosphere calculations have shown that these changes in
spectral features reveal differences in the efficiency of
cloud removal that seem to be triggered by an additional parameter
besides effective temperature.
We present models describing the settling of particle clouds
as an equilibrium process between condensation, gravitational
sedimentation and convective and turbulent mixing, based on
3D-hydrodynamical simulations for the description of the velocity
field.
These calculations predict a strong dependence of the settling on
gravity, and can therefore explain observed differences between the
spectral energy distributions of brown dwarfs of equal luminosity as
an effect of different mass.
Based on these calculations we would expect even stronger deviations
in the colours of young brown dwarfs of very low mass from those
commonly observed in the field. Such predictions seem to be in
aggreement with the first observations of candidate planetary-mass
objects, and would imply that extrasolar planets at very young ages
have spectral energy distributions significantly different from
previous models.
Our models also predict characteristic time scales for the cloud
formation processes that may be compared to observed
variability in brown dwarfs.
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