Impacts of Water Latent Heat on the Thermal Structure of Ultra-Cool Objects: Brown Dwarfs and Free-Floating Planets
Shih-Yun Tang (1, 2), Tyler D. Robinson (2, 3, 4), Mark S., Marley (5), Natasha E. Batalha (6), Roxana Lupu (7), L. Prato (1, 2) ((1), Lowell Observatory, (2) Department of Astronomy, Planetary, Northern, Arizona University, (3) Habitability, Atmospheres, and Biosignatures

TL;DR
This study develops a one-dimensional atmospheric model for ultra-cool objects like brown dwarfs and free-floating planets, highlighting the significant impact of water latent heat on their thermal structures and potential observability with JWST.
Contribution
Introduces a moist adiabatic convection model for ultra-cool atmospheres, demonstrating water's role in shaping thermal profiles and spectral signatures across various conditions.
Findings
Water vapor can reach 3% mixing ratio at high metallicity.
Water latent heat significantly alters temperature-pressure profiles.
Spectroscopic signatures of water and metallicity are detectable with JWST.
Abstract
Brown dwarfs are essential targets for understanding planetary and sub-stellar atmospheres across a wide range of thermal and chemical conditions. As surveys continue to probe ever deeper, and as observing capabilities continue to improve, the number of known Y dwarfs -- the coldest class of sub-stellar objects, with effective temperatures below about 600 K -- is rapidly growing. Critically, this class of ultra-cool objects has atmospheric conditions that overlap with Solar System worlds and, as a result, tools and ideas developed from studying Earth, Jupiter, Saturn and other nearby worlds are well-suited for application to sub-stellar atmospheres. To that end, we developed a one-dimensional (vertical) atmospheric structure model for ultra-cool objects that includes moist adiabatic convection, as this is an important process for many Solar System planets. Application of this model…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
