A transiting brown dwarf in a 2 hour orbit

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 15-09-2023
Journal Open Journal of Astrophysics
Volume | Issue number 6
Number of pages 16
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
We report the discovery of ZTF J2020+5033, a high-mass brown dwarf (BD) transiting a low-mass star with an orbital period of 1.90 hours. Phase-resolved spectroscopy, optical and infrared light curves, and precise astrometry from Gaia allow us to constrain the masses, radii, and temperatures of both components with few-percent precision. We infer a BD mass of MBD = 80.1 ± Mj, almost exactly at the stellar/substellar boundary, and a moderately inflated radius, RBD = 1.05 ±  0.02 Rj. The transiting object’s temperature, Teff ≈ 1700 K, is well-constrained by the depth of the infrared secondary eclipse and strongly suggests it is a BD. The system’s high tangential velocity (ν⊥ = 98 km s-1) and thick disk-like Galactic orbit imply the binary is old; its close distance (d ≈ 140 pc) suggests that BDs in short-period orbits are relatively common. ZTF J2020+5033 is the shortest-period known transiting BD by more than a factor of 7. Today, the entire binary would comfortably fit inside the Sun. However, both components must have been considerably larger in youth, implying that the orbit has shrunk by at least a factor of ∼ 5 since formation. The simplest explanation is that magnetic braking continues to operate efficiently in at least some low-mass stars and BDs.

Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.21105/astro.2307.15729
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