Clouds in the Coldest Brown Dwarfs: FIRE Spectroscopy of Ross 458C
Adam J. Burgasser (UCSD), Robert A. Simcoe (MIT), John J. Bochanski, (MIT), Didier Saumon (LANL), Eric E. Mamajek (U. Rochester), Michael C., Cushing (NASA/JPL), Mark S. Marley (NASA/Ames), Craig McMurtry (U., Rochester), Judith L. Pipher (U. Rochester)

TL;DR
This study presents evidence of condensate clouds affecting the spectra of the coldest T-type brown dwarfs, specifically Ross 458C, challenging previous assumptions and highlighting the importance of clouds in understanding such objects.
Contribution
It provides the first spectroscopic evidence of cloud opacity in the coldest T dwarfs and demonstrates the significance of clouds in their spectral analysis and characterization.
Findings
Clouds significantly influence the spectra of young cold T dwarfs.
Ross 458C has low surface gravity and supersolar metallicity.
Cloudy models fit the observed spectra better than cloudless models.
Abstract
Condensate clouds are a salient feature of L dwarf atmospheres, but have been assumed to play little role in shaping the spectra of the coldest T-type brown dwarfs. Here we report evidence of condensate opacity in the near-infrared spectrum of the brown dwarf candidate Ross 458C, obtained with the Folded-Port Infrared Echellette (FIRE) spectrograph at the Magellan Telescopes. These data verify the low-temperature nature of this source, indicating a T8 spectral classification, log Lbol/Lsun = -5.62+/-0.03, Teff = 650+/-25 K, and a mass at or below the deuterium burning limit. The data also reveal enhanced emission at K-band associated with youth (low surface gravity) and supersolar metallicity, reflecting the properties of the Ross 458 system (age = 150-800 Myr, [Fe/H] = +0.2 to +0.3). We present fits of FIRE data for Ross 458C, the T9 dwarf ULAS J133553.45+113005.2, and the blue T7.5…
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