Long-term, Multiwavelength Light Curves of Ultra-Cool Dwarfs: II. The evolving Light Curves of the T2.5 SIMP 0136 & the Uncorrelated Light Curves of the M9 TVLM 513
Bryce Croll, Philip S. Muirhead, Jack Lichtman, Eunkyu Han, Paul A., Dalba, Jacqueline Radigan

TL;DR
This study presents multiwavelength photometry of brown dwarfs, revealing rapid evolution in their light curves and providing insights into their atmospheric variability and rotation, with implications for spectrophotometric observations.
Contribution
It offers detailed, multi-epoch light curves of an L/T transition brown dwarf and a late M-dwarf, demonstrating the rapid evolution of variability and its implications for atmospheric studies.
Findings
SIMP J013656.5+093347 has a rotation period of 2.406 hours.
The brown dwarf's light curve amplitude varies from >6% to <1% within days.
Spectrophotometric observations should account for rapid variability to avoid misinterpretation.
Abstract
We present 17 nights of ground-based, near-infrared photometry of the variable L/T transition brown dwarf SIMP J013656.5+093347 and an additional 3 nights of ground-based photometry of the radio-active late M-dwarf TVLM 513-46546. Our TVLM 513-46546 photometry includes 2 nights of simultaneous, multiwavelength, ground-based photometry, in which we detect obvious J-band variability, but do not detect I-band variability of similar amplitude, confirming that the variability of TVLM 513-46546 most likely arises from clouds or aurorae, rather than starspots. Our photometry of SIMP J013656.5+093347 includes 15 nights of J-band photometry that allow us to observe how the variable light curve of this L/T transition brown dwarf evolves from rotation period to rotation period, night-to-night and week-to-week. We estimate the rotation period of SIMP J013656.5+093347 as 2.406 +/- 0.008 hours, and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
