2016ApJ...823L..35S -
Astrophys. J., 823, L35 (2016/June-1)
The collapse of the wien tail in the coldest brown dwarf? Hubble space telescope near-infrared photometry of WISE J085510.83-071442.5.
SCHNEIDER A.C., CUSHING M.C., KIRKPATRICK J.D. and GELINO C.R.
Abstract (from CDS):
We present Hubble Space Telescope (HST) near-infrared photometry of the coldest known brown dwarf, WISE J085510.83-071442.5 (WISE 0855-0714). WISE 0855-0714 was observed with the Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) on board HST using the F105W, F125W, and F160W filters, which approximate the Y, J, and H near-infrared bands. WISE 0855-0714 is undetected at F105W with a corresponding 2σ magnitude limit of ∼26.9. We marginally detect WISE 0855-0714 in the F125W images (S/N ∼ 4), with a measured magnitude of 26.41±0.27, more than a magnitude fainter than the J-band magnitude reported by Faherty et al. WISE J0855-0714 is clearly detected in the F160W band, with a magnitude of 23.86±0.03, the first secure detection of WISE 0855-0714 in the near-infrared. Based on these data, we find that WISE 0855-0714 has extremely red F105W-F125W and F125W-F160W colors relative to other known Y dwarfs. We find that when compared to the models of Saumon et al. and Morley et al., the F105W-F125W and F125W-F160W colors of WISE 0855-0714 cannot be accounted for simultaneously. These colors likely indicate that we are seeing the collapse of flux on the Wien tail for this extremely cold object.
Abstract Copyright:
© 2016. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.
Journal keyword(s):
brown dwarfs
Simbad objects:
4
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