Discovery of Two Nearby, Peculiar L Dwarfs from the 2MASS Proper Motion Survey: Young or Metal-Rich?
Dagny L. Looper (1), J. Davy Kirkpatrick (2), Roc M. Cutri (2), Travis, Barman (3), Adam J. Burgasser (4), Michael C. Cushing (1,5), Thomas Roellig, (6), Mark R. McGovern (7), Ian S. McLean (8), Emily Rice (8), Brandon J., Swift (5)

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of two nearby peculiar L dwarfs with unusual dust features, exploring whether their characteristics are due to youth or high metallicity, thus expanding our understanding of brown dwarf atmospheres.
Contribution
The discovery of two new L dwarfs with distinctive dusty atmospheres and analysis of their properties to determine the influence of age and metallicity.
Findings
Both objects are within 10 pc, increasing known nearby L dwarfs.
Spectral features suggest unusually dusty atmospheres.
Metal-rich composition or low gravity may cause observed features.
Abstract
We present the discovery of two nearby L dwarfs from our 2MASS proper motion search, which uses multi-epoch 2MASS observations covering ~4700 square degrees of sky. 2MASS J18212815+1414010 and 2MASS J21481628+4003593 were overlooked by earlier surveys due to their faint optical magnitudes and their proximity to the Galactic Plane (10 degrees < |b| < 15 degrees). Assuming that both dwarfs are single, we derive spectrophotometric distances of ~10 pc, thus increasing the number of known L dwarfs within 10 pc to 10. In the near-infrared, 2MASS J21481628+4003593 shows a triangular-shaped H-band spectrum, strong CO absorption, and a markedly red J-Ks color (2.38+/-0.06) for its L6 optical spectral type. 2MASS J18212815+1414010 also shows a triangular-shaped H-band spectrum and a slightly red J-Ks color (1.78+/-0.05) for its L4.5 optical spectral type. Both objects show strong silicate…
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