The Physical Properties of Four ~600K T Dwarfs
S. K. Leggett, M. C. Cushing, D. Saumon, M. S. Marley, T. L. Roellig,, S. J. Warren, B. Burningham, H. R. A. Jones, J. D. Kirkpatrick, N. Lodieu, P., W. Lucas, A. K. Mainzer, E. L. Martin, M. J. McCaughrean, D. J. Pinfield, G., C. Sloan, R. L. Smart, M. Tamura, J. Van Cleve

TL;DR
This study uses mid-infrared spectra and modeling to determine the physical properties of four very late T-type brown dwarfs, revealing their temperatures, metallicities, gravities, masses, and ages, and highlighting the importance of mid-infrared data.
Contribution
First detailed analysis of four ~600K T dwarfs using mid-infrared spectra to constrain their physical parameters and atmospheric properties.
Findings
Mid- to near-infrared flux ratios are highly sensitive to temperature.
Fluxes at 2.2 and 4.5um depend on metallicity and gravity, with degeneracies.
Vertical gas transport significantly affects mid-infrared fluxes.
Abstract
We present Spitzer 7.6-14.5um spectra of ULAS J003402.77-005206.7 and ULAS J133553.45+113005.2, two T9 dwarfs with the latest spectral types currently known. We fit synthetic spectra and photometry to the near- through mid-infrared energy distributions of these dwarfs and that of the T8 dwarf 2MASS J09393548-2448279. We also analyse near-infrared data for another T9, CFBD J005910.82-011401.3. We find that the ratio of the mid- to near-infrared fluxes is very sensitive to effective temperature at these low temperatures, and that the 2.2 and 4.5um fluxes are sensitive to metallicity and gravity; there is a degeneracy between these parameters. The 4.5 and 10um fluxes are also sensitive to vertical transport of gas through the atmosphere, which we find to be significant for these dwarfs. The full near- through mid-infrared spectral energy distribution allows us to constrain the effective…
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