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TOI-2119: A transiting brown dwarf orbiting an active M-dwarf from NASA's TESS mission

Authors :
Carmichael, Theron W.
Irwin, Jonathan M.
Murgas, Felipe
Pallé, Enric
Stassun, Keivan G.
Bartnik, Matthew
Collins, Karen A.
de Leon, Jerome
Esparza-Borges, Emma
Fedewa, Jeremy
Fong, William
Fukui, Akihiko
Jenkins, Jon M.
Kagetani, Taiki
Latham, David W.
Lund, Michael B.
Mann, Andrew W.
Moldovan, Dan
Morgan, Edward H.
Narita, Norio
Painter, Shane
Parviainen, Hannu
Quintana, Elisa V.
Ricker, George R.
Schulte, Jack
Schwarz, Richard P.
Seager, Sara
Sokolovsky, Kirill
Twicken, Joseph D.
Winn, Joshua N.
Carmichael, Theron W.
Irwin, Jonathan M.
Murgas, Felipe
Pallé, Enric
Stassun, Keivan G.
Bartnik, Matthew
Collins, Karen A.
de Leon, Jerome
Esparza-Borges, Emma
Fedewa, Jeremy
Fong, William
Fukui, Akihiko
Jenkins, Jon M.
Kagetani, Taiki
Latham, David W.
Lund, Michael B.
Mann, Andrew W.
Moldovan, Dan
Morgan, Edward H.
Narita, Norio
Painter, Shane
Parviainen, Hannu
Quintana, Elisa V.
Ricker, George R.
Schulte, Jack
Schwarz, Richard P.
Seager, Sara
Sokolovsky, Kirill
Twicken, Joseph D.
Winn, Joshua N.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

We report the discovery of TOI-2119b, a transiting brown dwarf (BD) that orbits and is completely eclipsed by an active M-dwarf star. Using light curve data from the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite mission and follow-up high-resolution Doppler spectroscopic observations, we find the BD has a radius of $R_b = 1.08 \pm 0.03{\rm R_J}$, a mass of $M_b = 64.4 \pm 2.3{\rm M_J}$, an orbital period of $P = 7.200865 \pm 0.00002$ days, and an eccentricity of $e=0.337\pm 0.002$. The host star has a mass of $M_\star = 0.53 \pm 0.02{\rm M_\odot}$, a radius of $R_\star= 0.50 \pm 0.01{\rm R_\odot}$, an effective temperature of $T_{\rm eff} = 3621 \pm 48$K, and a metallicity of $\rm [Fe/H]=+0.06\pm 0.08$. TOI-2119b joins an emerging population of transiting BDs around M-dwarf host stars, with TOI-2119 being the ninth such system. These M-dwarf--brown dwarf systems typically occupy mass ratios near $q = M_b/M_\star \approx 0.1-0.2$, which separates them from the typical mass ratios for systems with transiting substellar objects and giant exoplanets that orbit more massive stars. The nature of the secondary eclipse of the BD by the star enables us to estimate the effective temperature of the substellar object to be $2030\pm 84$K, which is consistent with predictions by substellar evolutionary models.<br />Comment: 14 pages, 13 figures, 4 tables, accepted in MNRAS

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1363560158
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093.mnras.stac1666