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Weather
in outer space? Just ask a brown dwarf
By Carolyn Jones Otten
Until recently, "How's the weather
up there?" was a question for pilots,
NBA stars and friendly giants.
Today, however, you might also ask
a dwarf. A brown dwarf, that is.
Brown dwarfs, which have been described
as "failed stars," are celestial bodies
more massive than planets like Jupiter
but not large enough to sustain the
thermonuclear reactions that make
a star shine.
In a recent issue of Astrophysical
Journal Letters, Katharina Lodders,
a senior research scientist in the
University's Planetary Chemistry Lab
in the earth and planetary sciences
department in Arts & Sciences -- along
with researchers from the University
of California, Los Angeles, NASA and
other institutions -- reported the
first evidence for the existence of
changing weather patterns on brown
dwarfs. They are the first non-planetary
objects to exhibit such phenomena.
Lodders' role was to model what compounds
may exist under the temperatures and
pressures in brown dwarf atmospheres.
"The thermodynamic modeling tells
us that liquid iron is settling into
clouds," Lodders said. "There are
lots of Earth-like analogies to suggest
what the 'weather' is like. The appearance
might be described as a sort of fog
and clouds, but there are still details
to be sorted out to get the most accurate
picture."
Liquid iron clouds
Brown
dwarfs bear similarities to both stars
and planets. Like stars, their evolutionary
life cycles can last billions of years,
and they contain the same elements
in roughly similar proportions as
our sun and other stars.
Yet, lacking sufficient mass to become
self-sustaining heat sources by nuclear
burning, brown dwarfs cool as they
age, though for the vast majority
of their life cycle they do remain
substantially warmer than the gas-giant
planets in our solar system. Like
planets and stars, they possess gravitational
fields and atmospheres that get cooler
as one travels farther from the core
to the outside.
These two factors facilitate the settling
of condensates into clouds once the
atmospheres become cool enough to
"freeze out" condensates. Where Earth
clouds are made of water vapor, the
intense heat of brown dwarfs gives
rise to metallic gases that can then
form clouds of, say, liquid iron.
Lodders is a specialist in applying
thermodynamics to study the chemical
makeup, from elemental ingredients,
of everything from stardust particles
to planets and stars. An analogy might
be examining various amounts of egg,
flour and sugar, then predicting what
they form under different conditions;
essentially, thermodynamics tells
you whether you're making cookies
or cake and rules out bread for lack
of yeast.
First discovered in 1995, brown dwarfs
pale in comparison to actual stars
but do emit a kind of dim glow that
enables astronomers to detect and
study them. The nearest known one
to Earth is about 19 light years away,
about 1,200,000 times the Sun-Earth
distance.
A specialized rating system describes
how cool the coolest dwarfs are and
how a typical brown dwarf cools as
it ages, changing from "M" for the
coolest stars to "L" to "T" for brown
dwarfs.
Lodders and her collaborators were
most interested in the older and cooler
T dwarfs because their more planet-like
atmospheres allowed for the possibility
of complex, even almost Jupiter-like
chemistry.
In one experiment described in their
recent article, the group collected
a series of data called absorption
spectra. Plotted graphically, absorption
spectra exhibit "dents" called bands
when certain wavelengths of light
are absorbed by particular chemical
compounds; these bands can then be
compared to giant databases of known
compounds. In essence, absorption
spectra become a kind of "fingerprint,"
revealing what types of compounds
are present in the atmosphere.
Once spectral data were collected,
the group sorted them from the hotter
L dwarfs down to cooler T dwarfs,
thus creating a model sequence of
the life cycle of a brown dwarf and
how its composition changes through
time. Two elements present within
brown dwarfs are iron and hydrogen,
and under certain conditions they
form a gas called iron hydride, which,
however, disappears once it gets too
cool.
The simplest example of the "disappearance"
process is steam condensing to form
liquid water when the steam temperature
decreases, but iron hydride does something
unusual. Rather than simply condense
into a liquid form of itself, iron
hydride decomposes into liquid iron,
leaving the hydro-gen left in the
gas.
Researchers predicted that conditions
in warmer L dwarfs would favor the
existence of iron hydride, and bands
in the absorption spectrum confirmed
the compound's presence. They also
predicted that the significant temperature
decreases encountered as one progresses
down from, say, an L5 dwarf to an
L8 dwarf, would force iron hydride
to condense into liquid iron, thus
reducing its concentration in the
atmosphere.
Correspondingly, they ex-pected the
iron hydride absorption band to become
weaker, which is what they found.
Signal
that wouldn't die
The
big surprise came as the researchers
continued to analyze the spectra through
the transition from L to T dwarfs.
If iron hydride was beginning to "condense
out" in the later L dwarfs, then even
more condensation would be expected
in the cooler T dwarfs. With this
in mind, the group might have predicted
a steadily weaker signal that would
eventually fade altogether, but what
they saw was a signal that would not
die.
"From the chemistry, we would not
expect that there is a way to get
extra iron hydride back into the system
as an object gets cooler," Lodders
said. "Once it gets cooler, it condenses
out. It's like wintertime in St. Louis
-- the air is very dry because the
cold freezes all the moisture out.
"But interestingly enough, in the
cooler brown dwarfs, the iron hydride
bands become stronger again, or put
another way, they never really disappear.
So the question then was, 'How do
we explain this?'"
Reappearing signals weren't the only
thing that puzzled the scientists.
Equally cryptic was the observation
that brown dwarfs, as they age, generally
appear fainter, but there is a brief
period during which they actually
seem to brighten.
The researchers hypothesized that
perhaps there was something in between
the extreme atmospheric conditions
of clear vs. cloudy. Based on this
new interpretation, the group devised
an exploratory model of partial cloud-clearing
in cool dwarfs. When they put their
model to the test, they found it accurately
described the characteristics of a
very broad range of brown dwarfs.
The group then surmised that the cooling
of the brown dwarfs leads to cloud-clearings
caused by atmospheric weather patterns.
Those "storms" eventually sweep clouds
aside, allowing the bright infrared
light trapped below to escape. It
is this phenomenon that is believed
to be responsible for the bizarre
"brightening" effect and for the strong-again
iron hydride bands.
"You do not expect iron hydride in
the coolest brown dwarfs because it
is condensed into the iron liquid
clouds," Lodders said. "If it's condensed,
it cannot be in the gas. This means
if it shows up in the spectrum, the
only way you are seeing it is by looking
through the clouds. And if you have
cloud-clearings, that means you have
weather."
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