Atmospheric Parameters of Field L and T Dwarfs
Michael C. Cushing, Mark S. Marley, D. Saumon, Brandon C. Kelly,, William D. Vacca, John T. Rayner, Richard S. Freedman, Katharina Lodders,, Thomas L. Roellig

TL;DR
This study analyzes the spectral energy distributions of nine ultracool dwarfs to derive their atmospheric parameters, confirming temperature trends across spectral types and exploring cloud properties and their influence on observed colors.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of ultracool dwarf spectra using atmospheric models that include condensate clouds, revealing temperature trends and cloud effects across spectral types L1 to T4.5.
Findings
Effective temperatures decrease from L1 to T4.5.
Temperatures at the L/T transition are nearly constant.
Thicker clouds correlate with redder near-infrared colors.
Abstract
We present an analysis of the 0.95-14.5 micron spectral energy distributions of nine field ultracool dwarfs with spectral types ranging from L1 to T4.5. Effective temperatures, gravities, and condensate cloud sedimentation efficiencies are derived by comparing the data to synthetic spectra computed from atmospheric models that self-consistently include the formation of condensate clouds. Derived effective temperatures decrease steadily through the L1 to T4.5 spectral types and we confirm that the effective temperatures of ultracool dwarfs at the L/T transition are nearly constant, decreasing by only ~200 K from spectral types L7.5 to T4.5. The two objects in our sample with very red J-Ks colors are best fitted with synthetic spectra that have thick clouds which hints at a possible correlation between the near-infrared colors of L dwarfs and the condensate cloud properties. The fits to…
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