The LEECH Exoplanet Imaging Survey: Characterization of the Coldest Directly Imaged Exoplanet, GJ 504 b, and Evidence for Super-Stellar Metallicity
Andrew J. Skemer, Caroline V. Morley, Neil T. Zimmerman, Michael F., Skrutskie, Jarron Leisenring, Esther Buenzli, Mickael Bonnefoy, Vanessa, Bailey, Philip Hinz, Denis Defr\'ere, Simone Esposito, D\'aniel Apai, Beth, Biller, Wolfgang Brandner, Laird Close, Justin R. Crepp

TL;DR
This study characterizes GJ 504 b, a cold, directly imaged exoplanet with a super-stellar metallicity, providing insights into its atmosphere and formation, bridging the gap between known exoplanets and Solar System giants.
Contribution
First detailed atmospheric analysis of GJ 504 b using narrow L-band photometry, revealing its super-stellar metallicity and supporting a planetary formation origin.
Findings
GJ 504 b has an effective temperature of 544 K.
It exhibits super-stellar metallicity ([M/H]=0.60).
Model fits suggest a mass of 3-30 Jupiter masses.
Abstract
As gas giant planets and brown dwarfs radiate away the residual heat from their formation, they cool through a spectral type transition from L to T, which encompasses the dissipation of cloud opacity and the appearance of strong methane absorption. While there are hundreds of known T-type brown dwarfs, the first generation of directly-imaged exoplanets were all L-type. Recently, Kuzuhara et al. (2013) announced the discovery of GJ 504 b, the first T dwarf exoplanet. GJ 504 b provides a unique opportunity to study the atmosphere of a new type of exoplanet with a ~500 K temperature that bridges the gap between the first directly imaged planets (~1000 K) and our own Solar System's Jupiter (~130 K). We observed GJ 504 b in three narrow L-band filters (3.71, 3.88, and 4.00 microns), spanning the red end of the broad methane fundamental absorption feature (3.3 microns) as part of the LEECH…
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