Dust in brown dwarfs and extra-solar planets II. Cloud formation for cosmologically evolving abundances
S. Witte, Ch. Helling, P. H. Hauschildt

TL;DR
This study models dust cloud formation in substellar atmospheres across a wide range of metallicities, revealing dust presence even in extremely metal-poor environments and complex dependencies of dust-to-gas ratios on metallicity.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive numerical simulation framework combining dust formation physics with atmospheric modeling to explore metallicity effects on dust clouds.
Findings
Dust clouds exist even at [M/H]=-6.0 in brown dwarf atmospheres.
Most massive young brown dwarfs and giant planets can resist dust formation.
Low metallicity leads to temperature inversions affecting cloud structure.
Abstract
Substellar objects have extremely long life-spans. The cosmological consequence for older objects are low abundances of heavy elements, which results in a wide distribution of objects over metallicity, hence over age. Within their cool atmosphere, dust clouds become a dominant feature, affecting the opacity and the remaining gas phase abundance of heavy elements. We investigate the influence of the stellar metallicity on the dust formation in substellar atmospheres and on the dust cloud structure and its feedback on the atmosphere. We utilize numerical simulations in which we solve a set of moment equations in order to determine the quasi-static dust cloud structure (DRIFT). These equations model the nucleation, the kinetic growth of composite particles, their evaporation and the gravitational settling as a stationary dust formation process. Element conservation equations augment this…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics
