A Combined VLT and Gemini Study of the Atmosphere of the Directly-Imaged Planet, beta Pictoris b
Thayne Currie, Adam Burrows, Nikku Madhusudhan, Misato Fukagawa,, Julien H. Girard, Rebekah Dawson, Ruth Murray-Clay, Scott Kenyon, Marc, Kuchner, Soko Matsumura, Ray Jayawardhana, John Chambers, Ben Bromley

TL;DR
This study combines VLT and Gemini observations to analyze the atmosphere of beta Pictoris b, revealing complex cloud properties and challenging existing atmospheric models, with implications for its formation age and mass.
Contribution
It provides new high-contrast IR photometry and atmospheric modeling of beta Pictoris b, highlighting the importance of cloud properties and dust particle sizes in understanding its atmosphere.
Findings
Beta Pic b's near-IR colors resemble a cloudy early-to-mid L dwarf.
Mid-IR photometry is difficult to reproduce with standard models.
Thick clouds with small dust particles fit the data well.
Abstract
We analyze new/archival VLT/NaCo and Gemini/NICI high-contrast imaging of the young, self-luminous planet Pictoris b in seven near-to-mid IR photometric filters, using advanced image processing methods to achieve high signal-to-noise, high precision measurements. While Pic b's near-IR colors mimick that of a standard, cloudy early-to-mid L dwarf, it is overluminous in the mid-infrared compared to the field L/T dwarf sequence. Few substellar/planet-mass objects -- i.e. And b and 1RXJ 1609B -- match Pic b's photometry, and its 3.1 and 5 photometry are particularly difficult to reproduce. Atmosphere models adopting cloud prescriptions and large ( 60 ) dust grains fail to reproduce the Pic b spectrum. However, models incorporating thick clouds similar to those found for HR 8799 bcde but also with small…
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