Weather on Other Worlds. II. Survey Results: Spots Are Ubiquitous on L and T Dwarfs
Stanimir Metchev, Aren Heinze, D\'aniel Apai, Davin Flateau,, Jacqueline Radigan, Adam Burgasser, Mark S. Marley, \'Etienne Artigau, Peter, Plavchan, and Bertrand Goldman

TL;DR
This study reveals that photometric variability due to patchy clouds is common on L and T dwarfs, with nearly all L dwarfs showing heterogeneities, and suggests that such atmospheric features are widespread across these objects.
Contribution
First comprehensive survey quantifying variability in L and T dwarfs, demonstrating ubiquity of atmospheric heterogeneities and potential links to surface gravity and rotation.
Findings
Most L dwarfs are variable with >0.2% flux change.
A significant fraction of T dwarfs also show variability.
Variability amplitudes increase across spectral types.
Abstract
We present results from the "Weather on Other Worlds" Spitzer Exploration Science program to investigate photometric variability in L and T dwarfs, usually attributed to patchy clouds. We surveyed 44 L3-T8 dwarfs, spanning a range of colors and surface gravities. We find that 14/23 (61%; 95% confidence interval: 41%-78%) of our single L3-L9.5 dwarfs are variable with peak-to-peak amplitudes between 0.2% and 1.5%, and 5/16 (31%; 95% confidence interval: 14%-56%) of our single T0-T8 dwarfs are variable with amplitudes between 0.8% and 4.6%. After correcting for sensitivity, we find that 80% (95% confidence interval: 53%-100%) of L dwarfs vary by >0.2%, and 36% (95% confidence interval: 19%-52%) of T dwarfs vary by >0.4%. Given viewing geometry considerations, we conclude that photospheric heterogeneities causing >0.2% 3-5-micron flux variations are present on virtually all L…
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