SIMBAD references

2021AJ....161..224T - Astron. J., 161, 224-224 (2021/May-0)

Weather on other worlds. V. The three most rapidly rotating ultra-cool dwarfs.

TANNOCK M.E., METCHEV S., HEINZE A., MILES-PAEZ P.A., GAGNE J., BURGASSER A., MARLEY M.S., APAI D., SUAREZ G. and PLAVCHAN P.

Abstract (from CDS):

We present the discovery of rapid photometric variability in three ultra-cool dwarfs from long-duration monitoring with the Spitzer Space Telescope. The T7, L3.5, and L8 dwarfs have the shortest photometric periods known to date: 1.080–0.005+0.004 hr, 1.14–0.01+0.03 hr, and 1.23–0.01+0.01 hr, respectively. We confirm the rapid rotation through moderate-resolution infrared spectroscopy, which reveals projected rotational velocities between 79 and 104 km s–1. We compare the near-infrared spectra to photospheric models to determine the objects' fundamental parameters and radial velocities. We find that the equatorial rotational velocities for all three objects are >=100 km s–1. The three L and T dwarfs reported here are the most rapidly spinning and likely the most oblate field ultra-cool dwarfs known to date. Correspondingly, all three are excellent candidates for seeking auroral radio emission and net optical/infrared polarization. As of this writing, 78 L-, T-, and Y-dwarf rotation periods have now been measured. The clustering of the shortest rotation periods near 1 hr suggests that brown dwarfs are unlikely to spin much faster.

Abstract Copyright: © 2021. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

Journal keyword(s): Brown dwarfs - Stellar rotation - Variable stars - Infrared photometry - Spectroscopy

Simbad objects: 86

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