AKARI Observations of Brown Dwarfs I.: CO and CO_2 Bands in the Near-Infrared Spectra
Issei Yamamura (1), Takashi Tsuji (2), Toshihiko Tanabe (2) ((1), Institute of Space, Astronautical Science, JAXA, (2) Institute of, Astronomy, School of Science, The University of Tokyo)

TL;DR
This study presents near-infrared spectra of seven brown dwarfs using AKARI, revealing CO and CO2 bands, and compares observations with models, highlighting discrepancies and the need for further understanding of atmospheric chemistry.
Contribution
First detection of CO2 fundamental band in late-L and T-type brown dwarfs spectra, and analysis of non-equilibrium chemistry effects in their atmospheres.
Findings
CO band observed in T8 dwarf confirming non-equilibrium chemistry
First identification of CO2 band at 4.2 um in late-L and T dwarfs
Discrepancies between observed spectra and LTE model predictions
Abstract
Near-infrared medium-resolution spectra of seven bright brown dwarfs are presented. The spectra were obtained with the Infrared Camera (IRC) on board the infrared astronomical satellite AKARI, covering 2.5--5.0 um with a spectral resolution of approximately 120. The spectral types of the objects range from L5 to T8, and enable us to study the spectral evolution of brown dwarfs. The observed spectra are in general consistent with the predictions from the previous observations and photospheric models. We find that the CO fundamental band around 4.6 um is clearly seen even in the T8 dwarf 2MASS J041519-0935, confirming the presence of non-equilibrium chemical state in the atmosphere. We also identify the CO_2 fundamental stretching-mode band at 4.2 um for the first time in the spectra of late-L and T-type brown dwarfs. We analyze the observed spectra by comparing with the predicted ones…
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