He's talking about how some worlds can retain hydrogen in their atmospheres in interstellar space after they've been ejected from the systems in which they form. Most of the paper is about the largest worlds, that retain very thick atmospheres, but for less massive worlds he says:
For sufficiently low masses, an alternative (collapsed atmosphere) solution exists with a molecular hydrogen ocean overlain by a thin vapor pressure-equilibrium atmosphere.
...and then conveniently doesn't say what the pressure of this atmosphere would be
Is there a way to calculate the pressure of a thin vapor pressure-equilibrium atmosphere made of hydrogen (over oceans of liquid hydrogen?) at a temperature of about 18 K? I've tried looking on the web, but I find a range of values from 0.213 atms, up to 1570 torr (about 2.1 atmospheres), which isn't exactly helpful. Or can it actually be a range of values?
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And as another question, if you were in orbit around a planet drifting in interstellar space (say, 1 or 2 lightyears from the nearest star at least), would you be able to see it in visible light?! Would starlight alone make it visible at all, or would it just be visible as a dark circle in the sky that blots out stars behind it??