An L Band Spectrum of the Coldest Brown Dwarf
Caroline V. Morley, Andrew J. Skemer, Katelyn N. Allers, Mark. S., Marley, Jacqueline K. Faherty, Channon Visscher, Samuel A. Beiler, Brittany, E. Miles, Roxana Lupu, Richard S. Freedman, Jonathan J. Fortney, Thomas R., Geballe, and Gordon L. Bjoraker

TL;DR
This study presents new L band spectra of the coldest brown dwarf, WISE 0855, revealing water vapor, methane, and water ice clouds, and discusses atmospheric models that improve understanding of cold planetary atmospheres.
Contribution
The paper provides the first L band spectrum of WISE 0855 and introduces atmospheric models with varied compositions and cloud properties, enhancing knowledge of cold brown dwarf atmospheres.
Findings
Detection of methane absorption in the spectrum.
Evidence for water ice clouds in the atmosphere.
Absence of phosphine spectral features.
Abstract
The coldest brown dwarf, WISE 0855, is the closest known planetary-mass, free-floating object and has a temperature nearly as cold as the solar system gas giants. Like Jupiter, it is predicted to have an atmosphere rich in methane, water, and ammonia, with clouds of volatile ices. WISE 0855 is faint at near-infrared wavelengths and emits almost all its energy in the mid-infrared. Skemer et al. 2016 presented a spectrum of WISE 0855 from 4.5-5.1 micron (M band), revealing water vapor features. Here, we present a spectrum of WISE 0855 in L band, from 3.4-4.14 micron. We present a set of atmosphere models that include a range of compositions (metallicities and C/O ratios) and water ice clouds. Methane absorption is clearly present in the spectrum. The mid-infrared color can be better matched with a methane abundance that is depleted relative to solar abundance. We find that there is…
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