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Cloud Atlas: Rotational Spectral Modulations and Potential Sulfide Clouds in the Planetary-mass, Late T-type Companion Ross 458C

Authors :
Mark S. Marley
Ben W. P. Lew
Yifan Zhou
Adam J. Burgasser
Glenn Schneider
Elena Manjavacas
Theodora Karalidi
Patrick J. Lowrance
Nicolas B. Cowan
Paulo A. Miles-Páez
Luigi R. Bedin
S. Metchev
Daniel Apai
Jacqueline Radigan
Source :
The Astrophysical Journal. 875:L15
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
American Astronomical Society, 2019.

Abstract

Measurements of photometric variability at different wavelengths provide insights into the vertical cloud structure of brown dwarfs and planetary-mass objects. In seven Hubble Space Telescope consecutive orbits, spanning $\sim$10 h of observing time}, we obtained time-resolved spectroscopy of the planetary-mass T8-dwarf Ross 458C using the near-infrared Wide Field Camera 3. We found spectrophotometric variability with a peak-to-peak signal of 2.62$\pm$0.02 % (in the 1.10-1.60~$\mu$m white light curve). Using three different methods, we estimated a rotational period of 6.75$\pm$1.58~h for the white light curve, and similar periods for narrow $J$- and $H$- band light curves. Sine wave fits to the narrow $J$- and $H$-band light curves suggest a tentative phase shift between the light curves with wavelength when we allow different periods between both light curves. If confirmed, this phase shift may be similar to the phase shift detected earlier for the T6.5 spectral type 2MASS J22282889-310262. We find that, in contrast with 2M2228, the variability of Ross~458C shows evidence for a {color trend} within the narrow $J$-band, but gray variations in the narrow $H$-band. The spectral time-resolved variability of Ross 458C might be potentially due to heterogeneous sulfide clouds in the atmosphere of the object. Our discovery extends the study of spectral modulations of condensate clouds to the coolest T dwarfs, planetary-mass companions.<br />Comment: Accepted in ApJL

Details

ISSN :
20418213
Volume :
875
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Astrophysical Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a856ce7e9d98326315be769b7a77d5a2
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/ab13b9