A SPHEREx Pipeline and Spectral Library for Ultracool Dwarfs
Jonathan Gagné, Jacqueline K. Faherty, Azul Ruiz Diaz, Louis-Philippe Coulombe, Thomas P. Bickle + 69 more
TLDR
A new SPHEREx pipeline and spectral library for ultracool dwarfs are presented, doubling available spectroscopic data and enabling new atmospheric studies.
Key contributions
- Developed a Python spectrophotometry extraction tool tailored for SPHEREx fast-moving point sources.
- Constructed a 0.75-5.0 μm low-resolution spectral library for 6003 ultracool dwarfs from SPHEREx QR2.
- More than doubled the number of ultracool dwarfs with spectroscopy, from 3449 to 7402 objects.
- Provided SPHEREx templates for spectral subtypes and tools for automated spectral typing.
Why it matters
This work significantly expands access to the 2.4-5.0 μm window for substellar objects, crucial for probing molecular chemistry of key CNOS-bearing species in cool brown dwarfs. The new SPIFF library facilitates efficient confirmation of candidates and population-level atmospheric studies.
Original Abstract
We present a Python spectrophotometry extraction tool tailored for fast-moving point sources detected in the SPHEREx mission, and use it to construct a set of 0.75-5.0 μm low-resolution (λ/Δλ ~ 50) spectrophotometry data products based on the SPHEREx Quick Release 2 (QR2) for a set of 6003 L0-Y1 ultracool dwarfs: 2050 known ultracool dwarfs, 3008 known photometric ultracool dwarf candidates, and 947 newly identified ultracool dwarfs. This work more than doubles the number of ultracool dwarfs with spectroscopy, from 3449 to 7402. We provide SPHEREx templates for each spectral subtype and a set of tools to assign automated spectral types. The QR2 data release generates spectrophotometry with an average signal-to-noise per spectral channel above ~10 for most objects with WISE W2 magnitudes of 14.0 mag and brighter. The compiled data set is made available publicly at https://mocadb.ca, where new spectral compilations from future data releases will also be made available as they are published. These new data provide a significant increase in the number of substellar objects for which the 2.4-5.0 μm window is now accessible, making it possible to probe important molecular chemistry of key CNOS-bearing species for the coolest brown dwarfs. We flag 2668 ultracool dwarfs as candidate young brown dwarfs, 250 as candidate subdwarfs, and 865 as possibly otherwise peculiar for future investigation. The SPIFF library presented here opens the doors to efficient confirmation of candidate substellar objects and follow-up studies of population-level atmospheric properties of cold brown dwarfs.
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