The radial distribution of dust species in young brown dwarf disks
B. Riaz, M. Honda, H. Campins, G. Micela, M. G. Guarcello, T., Gledhill, J. Hough, E. L. Martin

TL;DR
This study investigates the radial distribution of dust species in young brown dwarf disks, revealing strong dust processing signs, a flat disk structure, and potential local crystalline formation mechanisms, with implications for disk chemistry and evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed compositional analysis of dust in brown dwarf disks, highlighting differences from T Tauri stars and suggesting local crystalline formation processes.
Findings
Brown dwarfs show stronger dust processing in cold disk regions.
Most disks exhibit a flat structure consistent with dust evolution.
Outer disk regions can have higher crystalline silicate fractions than inner regions.
Abstract
We present a study of the radial distribution of dust species in young brown dwarf disks. Our work is based on a compositional analysis of the 10 and 20 micron silicate emission features for brown dwarfs in the Taurus-Auriga star-forming region. A fundamental finding of our work is that brown dwarfs exhibit stronger signs of dust processing in the cold component of the disk, compared to the higher mass T Tauri stars in Taurus. For nearly all of our targets, we find a flat disk structure, which is consistent with the stronger signs of dust processing observed in these disks. For the case of one brown dwarf, 2M04230607, we find the forsterite mass fraction to be a factor of ~3 higher in the outer disk compared to the inner disk region. Simple large-scale radial mixing cannot account for this gradient in the dust chemical composition, and some local crystalline formation mechanism may be…
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