SIMBAD references

2014ApJ...785...48B - Astrophys. J., 785, 48 (2014/April-2)

A monitoring campaign for Luhman 16AB. I. Detection of resolved near-infrared spectroscopic variability.

BURGASSER A.J., GILLON M., FAHERTY J.K., RADIGAN J., TRIAUD A.H.M.J., PLAVCHAN P., STREET R., JEHIN E., DELREZ L. and OPITOM C.

Abstract (from CDS):

We report resolved near-infrared spectroscopic monitoring of the nearby L dwarf/T dwarf binary WISE J104915.57-531906.1AB (Luhman 16AB), as part of a broader campaign to characterize the spectral energy distribution and temporal variability of this system. A continuous 45 minute sequence of low-resolution IRTF/SpeX data spanning 0.8-2.4 µm were obtained, concurrent with combined-light optical photometry with ESO/TRAPPIST. Our spectral observations confirm the flux reversal of this binary, and we detect a wavelength-dependent decline in the relative spectral fluxes of the two components coincident with a decline in the combined-light optical brightness of the system over the course of the observation. These data are successfully modeled as a combination of achromatic (brightness) and chromatic (color) variability in the T0.5 Luhman 16B, consistent with variations in overall cloud opacity; and no significant variability was found in L7.5 Luhman 16A, consistent with recent resolved photometric monitoring. We estimate a peak-to-peak amplitude of 13.5% at 1.25 µm over the full light curve. Using a simple two-spot brightness temperature model for Luhman 16B, we infer an average cold covering fraction of ~30%-55%, varying by 15%-30% over a rotation period assuming a ~200-400 K difference between hot and cold regions. We interpret these variations as changes in the covering fraction of a high cloud deck and corresponding "holes" which expose deeper, hotter cloud layers, although other physical interpretations are possible. A Rhines scale interpretation for the size of the variable features explains an apparent correlation between period and amplitude for Luhman 16B and the variable T dwarfs SIMP 0136+0933 and 2MASS J2139+0220, and predicts relatively fast winds (1-3 km/s) for Luhman 16B consistent with light curve evolution on an advective time scale (1-3 rotation periods). The strong variability observed in this flux reversal brown dwarf pair supports the model of a patchy disruption of the mineral cloud layer as a universal feature of the L dwarf/T dwarf transition.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): binaries: visual - brown dwarfs - stars: individual: (WISE J104915.57-531906.1AB, Luhman 16AB) - stars: low-mass

Simbad objects: 6

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