Properties of the T8.5 Dwarf Wolf 940 B
S. K. Leggett (Gemini Observatory), D. Saumon (LANL), Ben Burningham, (University Hertfordshire), Michael C. Cushing (JPL), M. S. Marley (NASA, Ames), D. J. Pinfield (University Hertfordshire)

TL;DR
This study characterizes the physical properties of the T8.5 dwarf Wolf 940 B using spectroscopy, photometry, and models, revealing its temperature, gravity, metallicity, and atmospheric mixing, and constraining its age and mass.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of Wolf 940 B's properties through combined observational data and atmospheric and evolutionary models, refining understanding of late T dwarf characteristics.
Findings
Wolf 940 B has a metallicity close to solar.
Effective temperature is between 585 K and 625 K.
Mass ranges from 24 to 45 Jupiter masses.
Abstract
We present 7.5-14.2um low-resolution spectroscopy, obtained with the Spitzer Infrared Spectrograph, of the T8.5 dwarf Wolf 940 B, which is a companion to an M4 dwarf with a projected separation of 400 AU. We combine these data with previously published near-infrared spectroscopy and mid-infrared photometry, to produce the spectral energy distribution for the very low-temperature T dwarf. We use atmospheric models to derive the bolometric correction and obtain a luminosity of log L/Lsun = -6.01 +/- 0.05. Evolutionary models are used with the luminosity to constrain the values of effective temperature (T_eff) and surface gravity, and hence mass and age for the T dwarf. We further restrict the allowed range of T_eff and gravity using age constraints implied by the M dwarf primary, and refine the physical properties of the T dwarf by comparison of the observed and modelled spectroscopy and…
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