The Influence of Clouds and Deuterium-Burning on Brown Dwarf Habitable Zones

Abstract

To better understand the potential habitability of planets orbiting brown dwarfs, this work presents a new set of equilibrium temperature evolution tracks. Unlike most previous work that relied on analytic scaling relationships for brown dwarf luminosity evolution, we use the outputs of modern brown dwarf evolution models that account for the effects of deuterium burning, cloud formation and dissipation, and the most recent atmospheric opacities. While clouds are present, brown dwarfs cool more slowly than if they did not have clouds, allowing orbiting planets to remain in the habitable zone (HZ) for millions of years longer than previously estimated. Similarly, we find that during the deuterium-burning phase of brown dwarfs, which also slows the evolution, planets at the same orbital radius but orbiting brown dwarfs of different masses can remain in the HZ for the same duration, creating deuterium ``sweet spots'' for habitability around brown dwarfs near the deuterium-burning limit. For example, at 0.01 au a planet orbiting both a 0.012 and a 0.020 solar mass brown dwarf stays in the HZ for ~170 - 180 Myr because deuterium-burning more strongly affects the cooling of lower-mass brown dwarfs. The size of the effect decreases with decreasing orbital radius, with larger orbital radii having a more pronounced deuterium burning influence. These effects are absent from the analytic cooling approximations used in prior studies of substellar HZs and are revealed by our application of modern substellar evolution models.

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