4.8 Article

Zones, spots, and planetary-scale waves beating in brown dwarf atmospheres

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 357, Issue 6352, Pages 683-+

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.aam9848

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Funding

  1. NASA
  2. Universities for Research in Astronomy under NASA [13176, NAS5-26555]
  3. NASA's Science Mission Directorate
  4. National Science Foundation [AST-1517177]

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Brown dwarfs are massive analogs of extrasolar giant planets and may host types of atmospheric circulation not seen in the solar system. We analyzed a long-term Spitzer Space Telescope infrared monitoring campaign of brown dwarfs to constrain cloud cover variations over a total of 192 rotations. The infrared brightness evolution is dominated by beat patterns caused by planetary-scale wave pairs and by a small number of bright spots. The beating waves have similar amplitudes but slightly different apparent periods because of differing velocities or directions. The power spectrum of intermediate-temperature brown dwarfs resembles that of Neptune, indicating the presence of zonal temperature and wind speed variations. Our findings explain three previously puzzling behaviors seen in brown dwarf brightness variations.

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