A Significant Over-Luminosity in the Transiting Brown Dwarf CWW 89Ab
Thomas G. Beatty, Caroline V. Morley, Jason L. Curtis, Adam Burrows,, James R. A. Davenport, and Benjamin T. Montet

TL;DR
This study reports a significant over-luminosity in the transiting brown dwarf CWW 89Ab, observed via Spitzer, suggesting a possible atmospheric temperature inversion and implications for its formation process.
Contribution
First detection of over-luminosity in CWW 89Ab, proposing a temperature inversion and potential super-stellar C/O ratio, with improved orbital eccentricity measurements.
Findings
CWW 89Ab's luminosity is 16 times higher than model predictions.
Evidence suggests a dayside temperature inversion in CWW 89Ab's atmosphere.
Constraints on tidal quality factors for the brown dwarf and host star.
Abstract
We observed eclipses of the transiting brown dwarf CWW 89Ab at 3.6um and 4.5um using Spitzer/IRAC. The CWW 89 binary system is a member of the Gyr-old open cluster Ruprecht 147, and is composed of a Sun-like primary and an early M-dwarf secondary separated by a projected distance of 25 AU. CWW 89Ab has a radius of RJ and a mass of MJ, and is on a 5.3 day orbit about CWW 89A with a non-zero eccentricity of (Curtis et al. 2016). We strongly detect the eclipses of CWW 89Ab in both Spitzer channels as ppm and ppm after correcting for the dilution from CWW 89B. After accounting for the irradiation that CWW 89Ab receives from its host star, these measurements imply that the brown dwarf has an internal luminosity of . This is 16 times, or…
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.
