Kepler Monitoring of an L Dwarf II. Clouds With Multiyear Lifetimes
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Author
Gizis, John E.
Dettman, Kyle G.
Burgasser, Adam J.
Camnasio, Sara
Filippazzo, Joseph C.
Cruz, Kelle L.
Metchev, Stanimir
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https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637x/813/2/104Metadata
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Gizis, John E., Kyle G. Dettman, Adam J. Burgasser, Sara Camnasio, Munazza Alam, Joseph C. Filippazzo, Kelle L. Cruz, Stanimir Metchev, Edo Berger, and Peter K. G. Williams. 2015. Kepler Monitoring of an L Dwarf Ii. Clouds With Multiyear Lifetimes. The Astrophysical Journal 813, no. 2: 104. doi:10.1088/0004-637x/813/2/104.Abstract
We present Kepler, Spitzer Space Telescope, Gemini-North, MMT, and Kitt Peak observations of the L1 dwarf WISEP J190648.47+401106.8. We find that the Kepler optical light curve is consistent in phase and amplitude over the nearly two years of monitoring with a peak-to-peak amplitude of 1.4%. Spitzer Infrared Array Camera 3.6 µm observations are in phase with Kepler with similar light curve shape and peak-to-peak amplitude 1.1%, but at 4.5 µm, the variability has amplitude < 0.1%. Chromospheric Hα emission is variable but not synced with the stable Kepler light curve. A single dark spot can reproduce the light curve but is not a unique solution. An inhomogeneous cloud deck, specifically a region of thick cloud cover, can explain the multi-wavelength data of this ultracool dwarf and need not be coupled with the asynchronous magnetic emission variations. The long life of the cloud is in contrast with weather changes seen in cooler brown dwarfs on the timescale of hours and days.Terms of Use
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