Panchromatic characterization of the Y0 brown dwarf WISEP J173835.52+273258.9 using JWST/MIRI
journal contribution
posted on 2025-10-13, 11:17authored byM Vasist, P Mollière, H Kühnle, P Patapis, O Absil, G Louppe, P-O Lagage, LBFM Waters, M Güdel, Th Henning, B Vandenbussche, D Barrado, L Decin, John PyeJohn Pye, P Tremblin, N Whiteford
Cold brown dwarf atmospheres provide a good training ground for the analysis of atmospheres of temperate giant planets. WISEP J173835.52+273258.9 (WISE 1738) is an isolated cold brown dwarf and a Y0 spectral standard with a temperature between 350–400 K, lying at the boundary of the T-Y transition. Although its atmosphere has been extensively studied in the near-infrared, its bulk physical parameters and atmospheric chemistry and dynamics are not well understood. Using a Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI) medium-resolution spectrum (5–18 μm), combined with near-infrared spectra (0.98–2.2 μm) from Hubble Space Telescope's (HST) Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) and Gemini Observatory's Near-Infrared Spectrograph (GNIRS), we aim to accurately characterize the atmospheric chemistry and bulk physical parameters of WISE 1738. We perform a combined atmospheric retrieval on the MIRI, GNIRS, and WFC3 spectra using a machine learning algorithm called Neural Posterior Estimation (NPE) assuming a cloud-free model implemented using petitRADTRANS . We demonstrate how this combined retrieval approach ensures robust constraints on the abundances of major atmospheric species, the pressure-temperature (P-T) profile, bulk C/O, and metallicity M/H along with bulk physical properties such as effective temperature, radius, surface gravity, mass, and luminosity. We estimate 1D and 2D marginal posterior distributions for the constrained parameters and evaluate our results using several qualitative and quantitative Bayesian diagnostics, including Local Classifier 2-Sample Test (L-C2ST), coverage, and posterior predictive checks. The combined atmospheric retrieval confirms previous constraints on H_2O, CH_4, NH_3, and for the first time provides constraints on CO, CO_2, and ^15NH_3. It also gives better constraints on the physical parameters and the P-T profile while also revealing potential biases in characterizing objects using data from limited wavelength ranges. The retrievals further suggest the presence of disequilibrium chemistry, as evidenced by the constrained abundances of CO and CO(_2), which are otherwise expected to be depleted and hence not visible beyond the near-infrared wavelengths under equilibrium conditions. We estimate the physical parameters of the object as follows: an effective temperature of 402(^ ) K, surface gravity ((łog g)) of 4.43(^ ) cm s(^ ), mass of 13(^ ) (M_ Jup ), radius of 1.14(^ ) (R_ Jup ), and a bolometric luminosity of (-6.52^ ) (łog L/L_⊙). Based on these values, the evolutionary models suggest an age between 1 and 4 Gyr, which is consistent with a high rotation rate of 6 hr of the brown dwarf. We further obtain an upper bound on the (^ )NH(_3) abundance, enabling a 3σ lower bound calculation of the (^ )N/(^ )N ratio = 275, unable to interpret the formation pathway as core collapse. Additionally, we calculate a C/O ratio of 1.35(^ ) and a metallicity of 0.34(^ ) without considering any oxygen sequestration effects.<p></p>
History
Author affiliation
University of Leicester
College of Science & Engineering
Physics & Astronomy