Mapping the pressure-dependent day-night temperature contrast of a strongly irradiated atmosphere with HST spectroscopic phase curve
Ben W. P. Lew (1, 2), D\'aniel Apai (1, 3), Yifan Zhou (4), Mark, Marley (1, 5), L. C. Mayorga (6), Xianyu Tan (7), Vivien Parmentier (7),, Sarah Casewell (8), Siyi Xu (9) ((1) Lunar, Planetary Laboratory, The, University of Arizona (2) Bay Area Environmental Research Institute

TL;DR
This study uses HST spectroscopic phase curves to analyze the atmospheric temperature contrast of an irradiated brown dwarf, revealing wavelength-dependent day-night variations and providing insights into strongly irradiated atmospheres similar to hot Jupiters.
Contribution
First detailed phase-resolved spectroscopy of an irradiated brown dwarf, mapping pressure-dependent temperature contrasts and atmospheric variations across orbital phases.
Findings
Wavelength-dependent day-night spectral variation observed
Water-band flux varies by about 360%
J-band flux varies by about 37%
Abstract
Many brown dwarfs are on ultra-short period and tidally-locked orbits around white dwarf hosts. Because of these small orbital separations, the brown dwarfs are irradiated at levels similar to hot Jupiters. Yet, they are easier to observe than hot Jupiters because white dwarfs are fainter than main-sequence stars at near-infrared wavelengths. Irradiated brown dwarfs are, therefore, ideal hot Jupiter analogs for studying the atmospheric response under strong irradiation and fast rotation. We present the 1.1--1.67 spectroscopic phase curve of the irradiated brown dwarf (SDSS1411-B) in the SDSS J141126.20+200911.1 brown-dwarf white-dwarf binary with the near-infrared G141 grism of Hubble Space Telescope Wide Field Camera 3. SDSS1411-B is a brown dwarf with an irradiation temperature of 1300K and has an orbital period of 2.02864 hours. Our best-fit model…
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