Mid-Infrared Photometry of Cold Brown Dwarfs: Diversity in Age, Mass and Metallicity
S. K. Leggett, Ben Burningham, D. Saumon, M. S. Marley, S. J. Warren,, R. L. Smart, H. R. A. Jones, P. W. Lucas, D. J. Pinfield, Motohide Tamura

TL;DR
This study uses Spitzer IRAC photometry to analyze very late-type T dwarfs, revealing how mid-infrared colors relate to their temperature, metallicity, age, and mass, aiding in understanding the diversity of cold brown dwarfs.
Contribution
It demonstrates the effectiveness of specific mid-infrared color indices in determining fundamental properties of cold brown dwarfs, expanding knowledge of their diversity.
Findings
H-[4.5] color strongly indicates T_eff for cold brown dwarfs.
Colors like H-K and [4.5]-[5.8] reveal metallicity and gravity effects.
Brown dwarfs with T_eff 500-800K show wide age and mass ranges.
Abstract
We present Spitzer IRAC photometry of twelve very late-type T dwarfs; nine have [3.6], [4.5], [5.8] and [8.0] photometry and three have [3.6] and [4.5] photometry only. We investigate trends with type and color for the planning and interpretation of surveys for the coldest T or Y dwarfs. Brown dwarfs with effective temperature (T_eff) below 700K emit more than half their flux at wavelengths beyond 3um, and the ratio of the mid-infrared flux to the near-infrared flux becomes very sensitive to T_eff. The color H-[4.5] is a good indicator of T_eff with a relatively weak dependence on metallicity and gravity. Conversely, the colors H-K and [4.5]-[5.8] are sensitive to metallicity and gravity. Thus near- and mid-infrared photometry provide useful indicators of the fundamental properties of brown dwarfs, and if temperature and gravity are known, then mass and age can be determined from…
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