The role of convection, overshoot, and gravity waves for the transport of dust in M dwarf and brown dwarf atmospheres
Bernd Freytag, France Allard, Hans-Guenter Ludwig, Derek Homeier,, Matthias Steffen

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamical simulations to explore how convection, overshoot, and gravity waves influence dust transport in M dwarf and brown dwarf atmospheres, revealing gravity waves as key to dust cloud maintenance.
Contribution
It provides a detailed physical understanding of dust mixing mechanisms, highlighting the roles of gravity waves and convection in atmospheric dust retention.
Findings
Gravity waves maintain thin dust clouds in hotter models.
Convective overshoot affects only regions immediately above convection zones.
Thicker clouds form at lower temperatures with internal convective flows.
Abstract
Observationally, spectra of brown dwarfs indicate the presence of dust in their atmospheres while theoretically it is not clear what prevents the dust from settling and disappearing from the regions of spectrum formation. Consequently, standard models have to rely on ad hoc assumptions about the mechanism that keeps dust grains aloft in the atmosphere. We apply hydrodynamical simulations to develop an improved physical understanding of the mixing properties of macroscopic flows in M dwarf and brown dwarf atmospheres, in particular of the influence of the underlying convection zone. We performed 2D radiation hydrodynamics simulations including a description of dust grain formation and transport with the CO5BOLD code. The simulations cover the very top of the convection zone and the photosphere including the dust layers for effective temperatures between 900K and 2800K, all with logg=5…
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