Ultracool Dwarfs Observed with the Spitzer Infrared Spectrograph. I. An Accurate Look at the L-to-T Transition at $\sim$300 Myr from Optical through Mid-infrared Spectrophotometry
Genaro Su\'arez (1), Stanimir Metchev (1), Sandy K. Leggett (2),, Didier Saumon (3), Mark S. Marley (4) ((1) The University of Western, Ontario, (2) Gemini Observatory, (3) Los Alamos National Laboratory, (4) NASA, Ames Research Center)

TL;DR
This study provides detailed infrared spectrophotometry of a young T2.5 dwarf, revealing temperature, radius, and spectral features that improve understanding of the L-to-T transition at around 300 million years.
Contribution
It offers the most comprehensive spectral energy distribution of an intermediate-gravity L/T transition dwarf, combining multi-wavelength data with precise Gaia measurements to refine fundamental parameters.
Findings
Young early-T dwarfs are cooler and larger than older counterparts.
Cloud-inclusive models better match the observed spectra.
Potassium lines are insensitive to gravity in early-T dwarfs.
Abstract
We present IRS 5--14 m spectra and 16 m and 22 m photometry of the T2.5 companion to the 300 Myr-old G0V star HN Peg. We incorporate previous 0.8--5 m observations to obtain the most comprehensive spectral energy distribution of an intermediate-gravity L/T-transition dwarf which, together with an accurate Gaia EDR3 parallax of the primary, enable us to derive precise fundamental parameters. We find that young (0.1--0.3 Gyr) early-T dwarfs on average have 140 K lower effective temperatures, 20% larger radii, and similar bolometric luminosities compared to 1 Gyr-old field dwarfs with similar spectral types. Our accurate infrared spectrophotometry offers new detail at wavelengths where the dominant carbon-bearing molecules have their strongest transitions: at 3.4 m for methane and at 4.6 m for carbon…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astro and Planetary Science
