Back to Search Start Over

Discovery of a Substellar Companion to the Nearby Debris Disk Host HR 2562

Authors :
Konopacky, Quinn M.
Rameau, Julien
Duchene, Gaspard
Filippazzo, Joseph C.
Godfrey, Paige A. Giorla
Marois, Christian
Nielsen, Eric L.
Pueyo, Laurent
Rafikov, Roman R.
Rice, Emily L.
Wang, Jason J.
Ammons, S. Mark
Bailey, Vanessa P.
Barman, Travis S.
Bulger, Joanna
Bruzzone, Sebastian
Chilcote, Jeffrey K.
Cotten, Tara
Dawson, Rebekah I.
De Rosa, Robert J.
Doyon, Rene
Esposito, Thomas M.
Fitzgerald, Michael P.
Follette, Katherine B.
Goodsell, Stephen
Graham, James R.
Greenbaum, Alexandra Z.
Hibon, Pascale
Hung, Li-Wei
Ingraham, Patrick
Kalas, Paul
Lafreniere, David
Larkin, James E.
Macintosh, Bruce A.
Maire, Jerome
Marchis, Franck
Marley, Mark S.
Matthews, Brenda C.
Metchev, Stanimir
Millar-Blanchaer, Maxwell A.
Oppenheimer, Rebecca
Palmer, David W.
Patience, Jenny
Perrin, Marshall D.
Poyneer, Lisa A.
Rajan, Abhijith
Rantakyro, Fredrik T.
Savransky, Dmitry
Schneider, Adam C.
Sivaramakrishnan, Anand
Song, Inseok
Soummer, Remi
Thomas, Sandrine
Wallace, J. Kent
Ward-Duong, Kimberley
Wiktorowicz, Sloane J.
Wolff, Schuyler G.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

We present the discovery of a brown dwarf companion to the debris disk host star HR 2562. This object, discovered with the Gemini Planet Imager (GPI), has a projected separation of 20.3$\pm$0.3 au (0.618$\pm$0.004") from the star. With the high astrometric precision afforded by GPI, we have confirmed common proper motion of HR 2562B with the star with only a month time baseline between observations to more than $5\sigma$. Spectral data in $J$, $H$, and $K$ bands show morphological similarity to L/T transition objects. We assign a spectral type of L7$\pm$3 to HR 2562B, and derive a luminosity of $\log$(L$_{\rm bol}$/L$_{\odot}$)=-4.62$\pm$0.12, corresponding to a mass of 30$\pm$15 M$_{\rm Jup}$ from evolutionary models at an estimated age of the system of 300-900 Myr. Although the uncertainty in the age of the host star is significant, the spectra and photometry exhibit several indications of youth for HR 2562B. The source has a position angle consistent with an orbit in the same plane as the debris disk recently resolved with Herschel. Additionally, it appears to be interior to the debris disk. Though the extent of the inner hole is currently too uncertain to place limits on the mass of HR 2562B, future observations of the disk with higher spatial resolution may be able to provide mass constraints. This is the first brown dwarf-mass object found to reside in the inner hole of a debris disk, offering the opportunity to search for evidence of formation above the deuterium burning limit in a circumstellar disk.<br />Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ Letters

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1608.06660
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8205/829/1/L4