The Brown-dwarf Atmosphere Monitoring (BAM) Project II: Multi-epoch monitoring of extremely cool brown dwarfs
A. Rajan, J. Patience, P. A. Wilson, J. Bulger, R. J. De Rosa, K., Ward-Duong, C. Morley, F. Pont, and R. Windhorst

TL;DR
This study presents multi-epoch infrared photometric monitoring of late T and Y-type brown dwarfs, revealing variability in the coldest known variable brown dwarf and suggesting a link between atmospheric clouds and variability.
Contribution
First multi-epoch photometric monitoring of these ultra-cool brown dwarfs, highlighting variability in the coldest Y dwarf and exploring atmospheric cloud effects.
Findings
WISE0458 is the coldest variable brown dwarf known to date.
Variability may be linked to atmospheric cloud properties.
No significant variability detected in three other targets.
Abstract
With the discovery of Y dwarfs by the WISE mission, the population of field brown dwarfs now extends to objects with temperatures comparable to those of Solar System planets. To investigate the atmospheres of these newly identified brown dwarfs, we have conducted a pilot study monitoring an initial sample of three late T-dwarfs (T6.5, T8 and T8.5) and one Y-dwarf (Y0) for infrared photometric variability at multiple epochs. With J-band imaging, each target was observed for a period of 1.0h to 4.5h per epoch, which covers a significant fraction of the expected rotational period. These measurements represent the first photometric monitoring for these targets. For three of the four targets (2M1047, Ross 458C and WISE0458), multi-epoch monitoring was performed, with the time span between epochs ranging from a few hours to ~2 years. During the first epoch, the T8.5 target WISE0458 exhibited…
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