Why is it so hard to tell forming gas giants from brown dwarfs in JWST images?
#1
I was looking at the latest images from the James Webb Space Telescope, specifically the ones of the protoplanetary disks around young stars, and I got to wondering how we can actually tell the difference between a forming gas giant and a brown dwarf from so far away. The mass ranges seem to overlap so much in those early stages, and I’m just not clear on what the definitive observational signature is.
Reply
#2
Yeah, there isn't a slam dunk signature. In practice people try to pin a mass by combining how the disk looks in infrared with how the gas moves. JWST can spot bright spots where a circumplanetary disk may be feeding the planet, and spectroscopy can hint at temperature and gravity of the companion, but you can't turn that into a clean mass cut. The real kicker is dynamical mass from the velocity field: if you can see a localized perturbation in the disk's rotation, you can model it to get a mass estimate. But even that depends on the disk's inclination, temperature, and how the gas couples to the planet. So you end up with ranges rather than a clear line between a planet and a brown dwarf.
Reply
#3
One disk I looked at had a bright point-like feature that looked like a CPD, but the spectrum was noisy and I couldn't separate star light from the feature. The accretion signature (like Brackett lines) suggested there was gas falling onto something, but it could be a low-mass planet rather than a more massive substellar object. It left me with a guess that the companion might be tens of Jupiter masses at most, but that's just a guess.
Reply
#4
Sometimes the issue is age and luminosity. A young object can glow as bright as a forming giant planet, and in a disk environment the brightness depends on how we are seeing the accretion heat. You can get a lot of overlap in late formation stages. The only thing that feels more decisive is a robust dynamical mass, which you really need very good velocity maps plus a model of the disk physics. Without that, you’re stuck with a range.
Reply
#5
Do you think the real problem is that we are chasing a single diagnostic and hoping for a clean cutoff, or is the bigger issue that many of the candidates we see aren't even bound to the star in the first place?
Reply


[-]
Quick Reply
Message
Type your reply to this message here.

Image Verification
Please enter the text contained within the image into the text box below it. This process is used to prevent automated spam bots.
Image Verification
(case insensitive)

Forum Jump: