Mid-infrared characterization of the planetary-mass companion ROXs 42B b

Authors
  • E.V. Garcia
  • T. Currie
  • A. Burrows
  • K.G. Stassun
  • T. Ratzka
  • J.H. Debes
  • D. Lafreniere
  • R. Jayawardhana
  • S. Correia
Publication date 05-2017
Journal Astronomy & Astrophysics
Article number A65
Volume | Issue number 601
Number of pages 11
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
We present new Keck/NIRC2 3–5 μm infrared photometry of the planetary-mass companion to ROXS 42B in L′, and for the first time in Brackett-α (Brff) and in Ms-band. We combine our data with existing near-infrared photometry and K-band (2–2.4 μm) spectroscopy and compare these data with models and other directly imaged planetary-mass objects using forward modeling and retrieval methods in order to characterize the atmosphere of ROXS 42B b. The ROXS 42B b 1.25–5 μm spectral energy distribution most closely resembles that of GSC 06214 B and κ And b, although it has a slightly bluer KsMs color than GSC 06214 B and thus currently lacks evidence of a circumplanetary disk. We cannot formally exclude the possibility that any of the tested dust-free/dusty/cloudy forward models describe the atmosphere of ROXS 42B b well. However, models with substantial atmospheric dust/clouds yield temperatures and gravities that are consistent when fit to photometry and spectra separately, whereas dust-free model fits to photometry predict temperatures/gravities inconsistent with the ROXS 42B b K-band spectrum and vice-versa. Atmospheric retrieval on the 1–5 μm photometry places a limit on the fractional number density of CO2 of log (nCO2) < 2.7, but provides no other constraints so far. We conclude that ROXS 42B b has mid-IR photometric features that are systematically different from other previously observed planetary-mass and field objects of similar temperature. It remains unclear whether this is in the range of the natural diversity of targets at the very young (~2 Myr) age of ROXS 42B b or unique to its early evolution and environment.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201629949
Other links http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2017A%26A...601A..65D
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