ULAS J141623.94 + 134836.3 - a faint common proper motion companion of a nearby L dwarf. Serendipitous discovery of a cool brown dwarf in UKIDSS DR6
read the original abstract
New near-infrared large-area sky surveys (e.g. UKIDSS, CFBDS, WISE) go deeper than 2MASS and aim at detecting brown dwarfs lurking in the Solar neighbourhood which are even fainter than the latest known T-type objects, so-called Y dwarfs. Using UKIDSS data, we have found a faint brown dwarf candidate with very red optical-to-near-infrared but extremely blue near-infrared colours next to the recently discovered nearby L dwarf SDSS J141624.08$ + $134826.7. We check if the two objects are co-moving by studying their parallactic and proper motion and compare the new object with known T dwarfs. The astrometric measurements are consistent with a physical pair ($sep$$\approx$75 AU) at a distance $d$$\approx$8 pc. The extreme colour ($J$$-$$K$$\approx$$-$1.7) and absolute magnitude ($M_J$=17.78$\pm$0.46 and $M_K$=19.45$\pm$0.52) make the new object appear as one of the coolest (T$_{eff}$$\approx$600 K) and nearest brown dwarfs, probably of late-T spectral type and possibly with a high surface gravity (log $g$$\approx$5.0).
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
Forward citations
Cited by 1 Pith paper
-
Integral field spectroscopy with no IFUs: combining wide-field rotational slitless spectroscopy with tomographic reconstruction
ROSSINI achieves integral field spectroscopy without IFUs through rotational slitless spectroscopy combined with tomographic reconstruction, recovering input datacubes to percent accuracy in numerical simulations.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.