Large Amplitude Variations of an L/T Transition Brown Dwarf: Multi-Wavelength Observations of Patchy, High-Contrast Cloud Features
Jacqueline Radigan, Ray Jayawardhana, David Lafreni\`ere, Etienne, Artigau, Mark Marley, Didier Saumon

TL;DR
This study observes a T1.5 brown dwarf exhibiting large, periodic brightness variations due to evolving patchy cloud features, providing insights into atmospheric dynamics at the L/T transition.
Contribution
It presents multi-wavelength, multi-epoch observations revealing high-amplitude variability and models cloud heterogeneity, advancing understanding of brown dwarf atmospheres at the L/T transition.
Findings
Periodic variability with 26% amplitude in J-band
Cloud heterogeneity causes observed brightness changes
Temperature contrasts between cloud patches exceed 175 K
Abstract
We present multiple-epoch photometric monitoring in the , , and bands of the T1.5 dwarf 2MASS J21392676+0220226 (2M2139), revealing persistent, periodic (0.005 hr) variability with a peak-to-peak amplitude as high as 26% in the -band. The light curve shape varies on a timescale of days, suggesting that evolving atmospheric cloud features are responsible. Using interpolations between model atmospheres with differing cloud thicknesses to represent a heterogeneous surface, we find that the multi-wavelength variations and the near-infrared spectrum of 2M2139 can be reproduced by either (1)cool, thick cloud features sitting above a thinner cloud layer, or (2)warm regions of low condensate opacity in an otherwise cloudy atmosphere, possibly indicating the presence of holes or breaks in the cloud layer. We find that temperature contrasts between thick and thin cloud…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
