A&A 414, 335-350 (2004)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20031605
Dust in brown dwarfs
III. Formation and structure of quasi-static cloud layers
P. Woitke1 and Ch. Helling1, 21 Zentrum für Astronomie und Astrophysik, Technische Universität Berlin, Hardenbergstraße 36, 10623 Berlin, Germany
2 Konrad-Zuse-Zenrum für Informationstechnik Berlin, Takustraße 7, 14195 Berlin, Germany
(Received 26 March 2003 / Accepted 13 October 2003 )
Abstract
In this paper, first solutions of the dust moment equations
developed in (Woitke & Helling 2003) for the description of dust
formation and precipitation in brown dwarf and giant gas planet
atmospheres are presented. We consider the special case of a static
brown dwarf atmosphere, where dust particles continuously nucleate
from the gas phase, grow by the accretion of molecules, settle
gravitationally and re-evaporate thermally. Mixing by convective
overshoot is assumed to replenish the atmosphere with condensable
elements, which is necessary to counterbalance the loss of
condensable elements by dust formation and gravitational settling
(no dust without mixing). Applying a kinetic description of the
relevant microphysical and chemical processes for TiO
2-grains,
the model makes predictions about the large-scale stratification of
dust in the atmosphere, the depletion of molecules from the gas
phase, the supersaturation of the gas in the atmosphere as well as
the mean size and the mass fraction of dust grains as function of
depth. Our results suggest that the presence of relevant amounts of
dust is restricted to a layer, where the upper boundary (cloud deck)
is related to the requirement of a minimum mixing activity (mixing
time-scale
s) and the lower boundary
(cloud base) is determined by the thermodynamical stability of the
grains. The nucleation occurs around the cloud deck where the gas is
cool, strongly depleted, but nevertheless highly supersaturated
(
). These particles settle gravitationally and populate
the warmer layers below, where the in situ formation (nucleation) is
ineffective or even not possible. During their descent, the
particles grow and reach mean radii of
at the cloud base, but the majority of
the particles in the cloud layer remains much smaller. Finally, the
dust grains sink into layers which are sufficiently hot to cause
their thermal evaporation. Hence, an effective transport mechanism
for condensable elements exists in brown dwarfs, which depletes the
gas above and enriches the gas below the cloud base of a considered
solid/liquid material. The dust-to-gas mass fraction in the cloud
layer results to be approximately given by the mass fraction of
condensable elements in the gas being mixed up. Only for
artificially reduced mixing we find a self-regulation mechanism that
approximately installs phase equilibrium (
) in a
limited region around the cloud base.
Key words: stars: atmospheres -- stars: low-mass, brown dwarfs -- dust, extinction -- molecular processes -- methods: numerical
Offprint request: P. Woitke, woitke@astro.physik.tu-berlin.de
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