A universal spin-mass relation for brown dwarfs and planets
Aleks Scholz (St Andrews/UK), Keavin Moore (York/Canada), Ray, Jayawardhana (York/Canada), Suzanne Aigrain (Oxford/UK), Dawn Peterson, (SSI/US), Beate Stelzer (Tuebingen/Germany)

TL;DR
This study measures rotation periods of young brown dwarfs, revealing a universal spin-mass relation that links their angular momentum to planetary objects, suggesting primordial angular momentum retention.
Contribution
It establishes a universal spin-mass relation across brown dwarfs and planets, demonstrating consistent angular momentum retention from formation.
Findings
Brown dwarfs with disks rotate slower, indicating disk braking effects.
Brown dwarfs' rotation periods increase linearly with mass.
The spin-mass relation extends over six orders of magnitude in mass.
Abstract
While brown dwarfs show similarities with stars in their early life, their spin evolution is much more akin to that of planets. We have used lightcurves from the K2 mission to measure new rotation periods for 18 young brown dwarfs in the Taurus star-forming region. Our sample spans masses from 0.02 to 0.08 Msol and has been characterised extensively in the past. To search for periods, we utilize three different methods (autocorrelation, periodogram, Gaussian Processes). The median period for brown dwarfs with disks is twice as long as for those without (3.1 vs. 1.6 d), a signature of rotational braking by the disk, albeit with small numbers. With an overall median period of 1.9 d, brown dwarfs in Taurus rotate slower than their counterparts in somewhat older (3-10 Myr) star-forming regions, consistent with spin-up of the latter due to contraction and angular momentum conservation, a…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
