Model Atmospheres From Very Low Mass Stars to Brown Dwarfs
F. Allard, D. Homeier, B. Freytag

TL;DR
This paper introduces the BT-Settl model grid for very low mass stars and brown dwarfs, incorporating cloud formation, gravity waves, and updated solar abundances to accurately simulate their atmospheres and spectral transitions.
Contribution
Development of a comprehensive 2D radiation hydrodynamic model grid for VLMs and BDs, including cloud physics and a new rule for velocity fields, improving spectral and atmospheric predictions.
Findings
Gravity waves drive cloud formation in VLMs and BDs.
The new model reproduces observed photometric and spectroscopic properties.
A smooth transition between stellar and substellar regimes is achieved.
Abstract
Since the discovery of brown dwarfs in 1994, and the discovery of dust cloud formation in the latest Very Low Mass Stars (VLMs) and Brown Dwarfs (BDs) in 1996, the most important challenge in modeling their atmospheres as become the understanding of cloud formation and advective mixing. For this purpose, we have developed radiation hydrodynamic 2D model atmosphere simulations to study the formation of forsterite dust in presence of advection, condensation, and sedimentation across the M-L-T VLMs to BDs sequence (Teff = 2800 K to 900 K, Freytag et al. 2010). We discovered the formation of gravity waves as a driving mechanism for the formation of clouds in these atmospheres, and derived a rule for the velocity field versus atmospheric depth and Teff , which is relatively insensitive to gravity. This rule has been used in the construction of the new model atmosphere grid, BT-Settl, to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
