English

Testing Substellar Models with Dynamical Mass Measurements

Solar and Stellar Astrophysics 2009-12-07 v1 Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics

Abstract

We have been using Keck laser guide star adaptive optics to monitor the orbits of ultracool binaries, providing dynamical masses at lower luminosities and temperatures than previously available and enabling strong tests of theoretical models. We have identified three specific problems with theory: (1) We find that model color-magnitude diagrams cannot be reliably used to infer masses as they do not accurately reproduce the colors of ultracool dwarfs of known mass. (2) Effective temperatures inferred from evolutionary model radii are typically inconsistent with temperatures derived from fitting atmospheric models to observed spectra by 100-300 K. (3) For the only known pair of field brown dwarfs with a precise mass (3%) and age determination (~25%), the measured luminosities are ~2-3x higher than predicted by model cooling rates (i.e., masses inferred from Lbol and age are 20-30% larger than measured). To make progress in understanding the observed discrepancies, more mass measurements spanning a wide range of luminosity, temperature, and age are needed, along with more accurate age determinations (e.g., via asteroseismology) for primary stars with brown dwarf binary companions. Also, resolved optical and infrared spectroscopy are needed to measure lithium depletion and to characterize the atmospheres of binary components in order to better assess model deficiencies.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0912.0738,
  title  = {Testing Substellar Models with Dynamical Mass Measurements},
  author = {Trent J. Dupuy and Michael C. Liu and Michael J. Ireland},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0912.0738},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

Proceedings of "New Technologies for Probing the Diversity of Brown Dwarfs and Exoplanets"

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