4.6 Article

CLOUDLESS ATMOSPHERES FOR L/T DWARFS AND EXTRASOLAR. GIANT PLANETS

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS
Volume 817, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.3847/2041-8205/817/2/L19

Keywords

brown dwarfs; methods: numerical; methods: observational; planets and satellites: atmospheres

Funding

  1. European Research Council under the European Community [247060, 247060-PEPS, 320478-TOFU]
  2. Royal Society [WM090065]
  3. K. U. Leuven IDO project [IDO/10/2013]
  4. FWO
  5. Royal Society [WM090065] Funding Source: Royal Society

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The admitted, conventional scenario to explain the complex spectral evolution of brown dwarfs (BDs) since their first detection. 20 years ago. has always been the key role played by micron-size condensates, called dust or clouds, in their atmosphere. This scenario, however, faces major problems, in particular the J-band brightening and the resurgence of FeH absorption at the L to T transition, and a physical first-principle understanding of this transition is lacking. In this Letter, we propose a new, completely different explanation for BD and extrasolar giant planet (EGP) spectral evolution, without the need to invoke clouds. We show that, due to the slowness of the CO/CH4 and N-2/NH3 chemical reactions, brown dwarf (L and T, respectively) and EGP atmospheres are subject to a thermo-chemical instability similar in nature to the fingering or chemical convective instability present in Earth oceans and at the Earth core/mantle boundary. The induced small-scale turbulent energy transport reduces the temperature gradient in the atmosphere, explaining the observed increase in near-infrared J-H and J-K colors of L dwarfs and hot EGPs, while a warming up of the deep atmosphere along the L to T transition, as the CO/CH4 instability vanishes, naturally solves the two aforementioned puzzles, and provides a physical explanation of the L to T transition. This new picture leads to a drastic revision of our understanding of BD and EGP atmospheres and their evolution.

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