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SCExAO and GPI $YJH$ Band Photometry and Integral Field Spectroscopy of the Young Brown Dwarf Companion to HD 1160

Authors :
Garcia, Eugenio V.
Currie, Thayne
Guyon, Olivier
Stassun, Keivan
Jovanovic, Nemanja
Lozi, Julien
Kudo, Tomoyuki
Doughty, Danielle
Schlieder, Joshua
Kwon, J.
Uyama, T.
Kuzuhara, M.
Carson, J.
Nakagawa, T.
Hashimoto, J.
Kusakabe, N.
Abe, L.
Brander, W.
Brandt, T. D.
Feldt, M.
Goto, M.
Grady, C.
Hayano, Y.
Hayashi, M.
Hayashi, S.
Henning, T.
Hodapp, K.
Ishii, M.
Iye, M.
Janson, M.
Kandori, R.
Knapp, G.
Matsuo, T.
McElwain, M.
Miyama, S.
Morino, J. I.
Moro-Martin, A.
Nishimura, T.
Pyo, T. -S.
Serabyn, E.
Suenaga, T.
Suto, H.
Suzuki, R.
Takahashi, Y. H.
Takami, H.
Takato, N.
Terada, H.
Thalmann, C.
Turner, E. L.
Watanabe, M.
Wisniewski, J.
Yamada, T.
Usuda, T.
Tamura, M.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

We present high signal-to-noise ratio, precise $YJH$ photometry and $Y$ band (\gpiwave~$\mu$m) spectroscopy of HD 1160 B, a young substellar companion discovered from the Gemini NICI Planet Finding Campaign, using the Subaru Coronagraphic Extreme Adaptive Optics instrument and the Gemini Planet Imager. HD 1160 B has typical mid-M dwarf-like infrared colors and a spectral type of M5.5$^{+1.0}_{-0.5}$, where the blue edge of our $Y$ band spectrum rules out earlier spectral types. Atmospheric modeling suggests HD 1160 B having an effective temperature of 3000--3100 $K$, a surface gravity of log $g$ = 4--4.5, a radius of~\bestfitradius~$R_{\rm J}$, and a luminosity of log $L$/$L_{\odot} = -2.76 \pm 0.05$. Neither the primary's Hertzspring-Russell diagram position nor atmospheric modeling of HD 1160 B show evidence for a sub-solar metallicity. The interpretation of the HD 1160 B depends on which stellar system components are used to estimate an age. Considering HD 1160 A, B and C jointly, we derive an age of 80--125 Myr, implying that HD 1160 B straddles the hydrogen-burning limit (70--90 $M_{\rm J}$). If we consider HD 1160 A alone, younger ages (20--125 Myr) and a brown dwarf-like mass (35--90 $M_{\rm J}$) are possible. Interferometric measurements of the primary, a precise GAIA parallax, and moderate resolution spectroscopy can better constrain the system's age and how HD 1160 B fits within the context of (sub)stellar evolution.<br />Comment: 50 pages, 6 Tables, 13 Figures; Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1610.05786
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/834/2/162