SCExAO/CHARIS Direct Imaging Discovery of a 20 au Separation, Low-mass Ratio Brown Dwarf Companion to an Accelerating Sun-like Star *

Currie, Thayne and Brandt, Timothy D. and Kuzuhara, Masayuki and Chilcote, Jeffrey and Guyon, Olivier and Marois, Christian and Groff, Tyler D. and Lozi, Julien and Vievard, Sebastien and Sahoo, Ananya and Deo, Vincent and Jovanovic, Nemanja and Martinache, Frantz and Wagner, Kevin and Dupuy, Trent and Wahl, Matthew and Letawsky, Michael and Li, Yiting and Zeng, Yunlin and Brandt, G. Mirek and Michalik, Daniel and Grady, Carol and Janson, Markus and Knapp, Gillian R. and Kwon, Jungmi and Lawson, Kellen and McElwain, Michael W. and Uyama, Taichi and Wisniewski, John and Tamura, Motohide (2020) SCExAO/CHARIS Direct Imaging Discovery of a 20 au Separation, Low-mass Ratio Brown Dwarf Companion to an Accelerating Sun-like Star *. The Astrophysical Journal Letters, 904 (2). L25. ISSN 2041-8205

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Abstract

We present the direct imaging discovery of a substellar companion to the nearby Sun-like star, HD 33632 Aa, at a projected separation of ∼20 au, obtained with SCExAO/CHARIS integral field spectroscopy complemented by Keck/NIRC2 thermal infrared imaging. The companion, HD 33632 Ab, induces a 10.5σ astrometric acceleration on the star as detected with the Gaia and Hipparcos satellites. SCExAO/CHARIS JHK (1.1–2.4 μm) spectra and Keck/NIRC2 Lp (3.78 μm) photometry are best matched by a field L/T transition object: an older, higher-gravity, and less dusty counterpart to HR 8799 cde. Combining our astrometry with Gaia/Hipparcos data and archival Lick Observatory radial velocities, we measure a dynamical mass of 46.4 ± 8 MJ and an eccentricity of e < 0.46 at 95% confidence. HD 33632 Ab's mass and mass ratio (4.0% ± 0.7%) are comparable to the low-mass brown dwarf GJ 758 B and intermediate between the more massive brown dwarf HD 19467 B and the (near-)planet-mass companions to HR 2562 and GJ 504. Using Gaia to select for direct imaging observations with the newest extreme adaptive optics systems can reveal substellar or even planet-mass companions on solar system–like scales at an increased frequency compared to blind surveys.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Digital Academic Press > Physics and Astronomy
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@digiacademicpress.org
Date Deposited: 18 May 2023 06:05
Last Modified: 03 Sep 2025 03:49
URI: http://core.ms4sub.com/id/eprint/1229

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