Atmospheric abundances and bulk properties of the binary brown dwarf Gliese 229 Bab from JWST/MIRI spectroscopy
Jerry W. Xuan, Marshall D. Perrin, Dimitri Mawet, Heather A. Knutson,, Sagnick Mukherjee, Yapeng Zhang, Kielan K. Hoch, Jason J. Wang, Julie Inglis,, Nicole L. Wallack, Jean-Baptiste Ruffio

TL;DR
This study uses JWST/MIRI spectroscopy to analyze the atmospheric composition and properties of the binary brown dwarf Gliese 229 Bab, revealing consistent abundances with the host star and demonstrating the effectiveness of mid-infrared data.
Contribution
First detailed mid-infrared spectral analysis of a binary brown dwarf using a two-component model, providing accurate atmospheric abundances and properties.
Findings
C/O ratio of 0.65±0.05 consistent with host star
Effective temperatures of 900K and 775K for the two components
Vertical diffusion coefficients similar between components
Abstract
We present JWST/MIRI low-resolution spectroscopy (m) of the first known substellar companion, Gliese 229 Bab, which was recently resolved into a tight binary brown dwarf. Previous atmospheric retrieval studies modeling Gliese 229 B as a single brown dwarf have reported anomalously high carbon-to-oxygen ratios (C/O) of using m ground-based spectra. Here, we fit the MIRI spectrum of Gliese 229 Bab with a two-component binary model using the Sonora Elf Owl grid and additionally account for the observed band flux ratio of the binary brown dwarf. Assuming the two brown dwarfs share the same abundances, we obtain and as their abundances ( statistical errors), which are fully consistent with the host star abundances. We also recover the same abundances if we fit the MIRI spectrum with a…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
