Global weather map reveals persistent top-of-atmosphere features on the nearest brown dwarfs
Xueqing Chen, Beth A. Biller, Johanna M. Vos, Ian J. M. Crossfield,, Gregory N. Mace, Callie E. Hood, Xianyu Tan, Katelyn N. Allers, Emily C., Martin, Emma Bubb, Jonathan J. Fortney, Caroline V. Morley, Mark Hammond

TL;DR
This study used Doppler imaging with high-resolution spectroscopy to create the first global weather maps of brown dwarfs, revealing persistent atmospheric features and advancing understanding of their atmospheric dynamics.
Contribution
It applied Doppler imaging to brown dwarfs using Gemini IGRINS data, producing the first simultaneous H and K band weather maps and identifying stable atmospheric features.
Findings
Detected persistent spot-like structures on WISE 1049B.
Revealed new polar spots on WISE 1049A.
Indicated atmospheric features are stable over days and involve clouds.
Abstract
Brown dwarfs and planetary-mass companions display rotationally modulated photometric variability, especially those near the L/T transition. This variability is commonly attributed to top-of-atmosphere (TOA) inhomogeneities, with proposed models including patchy thick and thin clouds, planetary-scale jets, or chemical disequilibrium. Surface mapping techniques are powerful tools to probe their atmospheric structures and distinguish between models. One of the most successful methods for stellar surface mapping is Doppler imaging, where the existence of TOA inhomogeneities can be inferred from their varying Doppler shifts across the face of a rotating star. We applied Doppler imaging to the nearest brown dwarf binary WISE 1049AB (aka Luhman 16AB) using time-resolved, high-resolution spectroscopic observations from Gemini IGRINS, and obtained for the first time H and K band simultaneous…
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