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Three low-mass companions around aged stars discovered by TESS

Authors :
Lin, Zitao
Gan, Tianjun
Wang, Sharon X.
Shporer, Avi
Rabus, Markus
Zhou, George
Psaridi, Angelica
Bouchy, François
Bieryla, Allyson
Latham, David W.
Mao, Shude
Stassun, Keivan G.
Hellier, Coel
Howell, Steve B.
Ziegler, Carl
Caldwell, Douglas A.
Clark, Catherine A.
Collins, Karen A.
Curtis, Jason L.
Faherty, Jacqueline K.
Gnilka, Crystal L.
Grunblatt, Samuel K.
Jenkins, Jon M.
Johnson, Marshall C.
Law, Nicholas
Lendl, Monika
Littlefield, Colin
Lund, Michael B.
Lund, Mikkel N.
Mann, Andrew W.
McDermott, Scott
Mishra, Lokesh
Mounzer, Dany
Paegert, Martin
Pritchard, Tyler
Ricker, George R.
Seager, Sara
Srdoc, Gregor
Sun, Qinghui
Tang, Jiaxin
Udry, Stéphane
Vanderspek, Roland
Watanabe, David
Winn, Joshua N.
Yu, Jie
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

We report the discovery of three transiting low-mass companions to aged stars: a brown dwarf (TOI-2336b) and two objects near the hydrogen burning mass limit (TOI-1608b and TOI-2521b). These three systems were first identified using data from the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS). TOI-2336b has a radius of $1.05\pm 0.04\ R_J$, a mass of $69.9\pm 2.3\ M_J$ and an orbital period of 7.71 days. TOI-1608b has a radius of $1.21\pm 0.06\ R_J$, a mass of $90.7\pm 3.7\ M_J$ and an orbital period of 2.47 days. TOI-2521b has a radius of $1.01\pm 0.04\ R_J$, a mass of $77.5\pm 3.3\ M_J$ and an orbital period of 5.56 days. We found all these low-mass companions are inflated. We fitted a relation between radius, mass and incident flux using the sample of known transiting brown dwarfs and low-mass M dwarfs. We found a positive correlation between the flux and the radius for brown dwarfs and for low-mass stars that is weaker than the correlation observed for giant planets. We also found that TOI-1608 and TOI-2521 are very likely to be spin-orbit synchronized, leading to the unusually rapid rotation of the primary stars considering their evolutionary stages. Our estimates indicate that both systems have much shorter spin-orbit synchronization timescales compared to their ages. These systems provide valuable insights into the evolution of stellar systems with brown dwarf and low-mass stellar companions influenced by tidal effects.<br />Comment: 23 pages, 15 figures; Published in MNRAS

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2210.13939
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stad1745