webb Telescope Reveals Wild, Dynamic Weather on Lone “Planet” SIMP 0136 – More Chaotic Than Jupiter
WASHINGTON D.C. – in a groundbreaking discovery, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has mapped the surprisingly turbulent and complex weather patterns on SIMP 0136, a brown dwarf drifting through space, revealing atmospheric conditions far more dynamic than those observed on Jupiter. The findings, published recently, demonstrate a vertically and horizontally churning atmosphere wiht rapidly forming and dissolving cloud decks, and suggest a new understanding of weather systems on exoplanets.
Researchers utilizing data from the Sonora Diamondback library of brown dwarf atmospheric models found that no single model could adequately explain the JWST observations. Instead, at least three distinct atmospheric states were required to accurately reproduce the data, indicating a highly variable environment.
The study reveals that cloud formations on SIMP 0136 are not static, but evolve on timescales of just hours.Deeper atmospheric layers contain iron clouds beneath forsterite clouds, with temperatures ranging from 1,000 to 1,300 Kelvin. These layers generate pulsing light curves synchronized with the planet’s rotation.
JWST’s observations also created a rough three-dimensional map of the atmosphere, showing dense, hot lower levels dominated by forsterite clouds, middle layers with luminous spots indicating localized heating and water vapor absorption, and thin, cold upper layers containing carbon monoxide and water bands that trace high-altitude winds. This paints a picture of a world where clouds collide and mix vertically, creating a chaotic interplay of minerals and gases.
“The result is a portrait of a world where clouds don’t just move sideways - they churn and collide vertically, mixing minerals and gases in a chaotic dance,” the article states.
Brown dwarfs like SIMP 0136 serve as valuable “cosmic laboratories” for studying exoplanets, as their isolation allows for direct atmospheric observation without stellar glare. Understanding their weather patterns will aid in interpreting the signals received from exoplanets that transit their stars.
“If JWST can detect such intricate atmospheric behaviour on a lone, faint brown dwarf, similar techniques could soon reveal weather systems on giant exoplanets, even those many light-years away,” the report notes.
The precision of JWST’s data even allowed the team to detect minute Doppler shifts caused by moving clouds, suggesting the potential for future techniques like Doppler tomography to map winds on alien worlds.
“JWST’s stability opens a new window into brown dwarf atmospheric dynamics,” the researchers wrote in their paper.
Co-author Étienne Artigau, an astronomer at the Université de Montréal, described SIMP 0136 as “an ideal target to study brown dwarf atmospheric variability,” citing its rapid rotation and brightness as key characteristics.
SIMP 0136 continues its journey through the constellation Pisces, but its turbulent atmosphere is providing astronomers with unprecedented insights into the potential for chaotic and complex weather systems throughout the universe.