CLOUDS search for variability in brown dwarf atmospheres
B. Goldman (NMSU, MPIA), M. C. Cushing (UA), M. S. Marley (Ames), \'E., Artigau (Gemini), K. S. Baliyan (PRL), V. J. S. B\'ejar (IAC), J. A., Caballero (MPIA, IAC), N. Chanover (NMSU), M. Connelley (IfA), R. Doyon, (Montr\'eal), T. Forveille (CFHT, Grenoble), S. Ganesh (PRL)

TL;DR
This study searched for spectral variability in brown dwarfs to understand cloud dynamics and the L- to T-type transition, finding limited evidence for large-scale atmospheric changes within observational limits.
Contribution
It provides new spectroscopic variability constraints on brown dwarf atmospheres, testing cloud disruption hypotheses with high-precision time series data.
Findings
No significant broad-band variability detected (2-3%)
Upper limits suggest cloud cover disruptions smaller than 5-8% of the disk
Marginal variability signals require further confirmation
Abstract
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. Aims: It has been proposed that growth of heterogeneities in the global cloud deck may account for the L- to T-type transition as 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 in order to test this hypothesis. Methods: We obtained spectroscopic time series using VLT/ISAAC, over 0.99-1.13um, and IRTF/SpeX for two of our targets, in J, H and K bands. We search for statistically variable lines and correlation between those. Results: High spectral-frequency variations are seen…
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