Observed Variability at 1um and 4um in the Y0 Brown Dwarf WISEP J173835.52+273258.9
S. K. Leggett, Michael C. Cushing, Kevin K. Hardegree-Ullman, Jesica, L. Trucks, M. S. Marley, Caroline V. Morley, D. Saumon, S. J. Carey, J. J., Fortney, C. R. Gelino, J. E. Gizis, J. D. Kirkpatrick, G. N. Mace

TL;DR
This study monitors a Y0 brown dwarf at infrared wavelengths, revealing variability and atmospheric features that suggest complex weather patterns and rotation, with implications for understanding substellar atmospheres.
Contribution
First detailed multi-wavelength variability study of a Y0 brown dwarf showing evolving atmospheric features and rotation period.
Findings
Mid-infrared light curves show significant evolution over four months.
Detected a 6-hour rotation period with large-scale surface features.
Atmospheric models with patchy clouds explain observed variability.
Abstract
We have monitored photometrically the Y0 brown dwarf WISEP J173835.52+273258.9 (W1738) at both near- and mid-infrared wavelengths. This ~1 Gyr-old 400K dwarf is at a distance of 8pc and has a mass around 5 M_Jupiter. We observed W1738 using two near-infrared filters at lambda~1um, Y and J, on Gemini observatory, and two mid-infrared filters at lambda~4um, [3.6] and [4.5], on the Spitzer observatory. Twenty-four hours were spent on the source by Spitzer on each of June 30 and October 30 2013 UT. Between these observations, around 5 hours were spent on the source by Gemini on each of July 17 and August 23 2013 UT. The mid-infrared light curves show significant evolution between the two observations separated by four months. We find that a double sinusoid can be fit to the [4.5] data, where one sinusoid has a period of 6.0 +/- 0.1 hours and the other a period of 3.0 +/- 0.1 hours. The…
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