GeminiFocus October 2016 | Page 7

to be able to co-add from night-to-night? In the end, we saw a faint trace after our first two-hour observation block, and two months later, we had a reasonable spectrum. This observation could not have been done anywhere else. The combination of Gemini’s low-emissivity silver primary coating, queue-mode scheduling (that provided two hours per night over 14 nights), dry Maunakea weather, and a fantastic observing staff were all necessary to obtain such a faint spectrum. Before our Gemini observation, there had never been an M-band spectrum of a brown dwarf or extrasolar planet colder than 700 K. As theoretical work suggested, WISE 0855 should have a spectrum dominated by water vapor. When we fit the Wise 0855 data to our initial cloud-free model, all of the wiggles in the spectrum were indeed the result of water vapor but their signature appeared more muted. Borrowing a well-established October 2016 technique from our friends who study Jupiter, we inserted an optically thick water cloud deep in the photosphere of our model atmosphere, to see if it would produce the muting seen in our spectrum. The cloudy model fit significantly better than the cloudfree one. However, water clouds are notoriously difficult to model. WISE 0855 is just our first chance to apply these models to an extrasolar object. Measuring Up By far the closest analog to WISE 0855 is Jupiter, which has a temperature of ~130 K. We compared our WISE 0855 spectrum to one of Jupiter’s and noticed striking similarities from 4.8-5.15 microns, where water vapor absorption features dominate both objects. Shortward of 4.8 microns, the spectra diverge. Jupiter shows phosphine absorption, while WISE 0855 does not. GeminiFocus Figure 3. Upper Left: Water cloud models fit better than cloud-free models. Upper Right: WISE 0855 looks strikingly similar to Jupiter from 4.8-5.15 microns. Shortward of 4.8 microns, the spectra diverge as Jupiter is dominated by phosphine, while WISE 0855 is dominated by water vapor. Lower Left: Our WISE 0855 spectrum is sensitive to a Jupiter abundance of phosphine, but none is seen. Lower Right: Our WISE 0855 spectrum is marginally sensitive to deuterated methane, but the feature is blended with water vapor features that are not well understood. 5