2008A&A...487..595S


Query : 2008A&A...487..595S

2008A&A...487..595S - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 487, 595-599 (2008/8-4)

An extremely wide and very low-mass pair with common proper motion. Is it representative of a nearby halo stream?

SCHOLZ R.-D., KHARCHENKO N.V., LODIEU N. and McCAUGHREAN M.J.

Abstract (from CDS):

We describe the discovery of an extremely wide pair of low-mass stars with a common large proper motion and discuss their possible membership in a Galactic halo stream crossing the Solar neighbourhood. In a high proper motion survey of the southern sky we used multi-epoch positions and photometry from the SuperCOSMOS Sky Surveys. New nearby ultracool dwarf and subdwarf candidates were selected among the faint and red high proper motion objects, and subsequently confirmed by low-resolution classification spectroscopy. The resulting spectroscopic distance estimates, approximate radial velocity measurements and improved proper motions involving additional epochs from the Two Micron All Sky Survey and from the DEep Near-Infrared Survey were used to compute Galactic space velocities. The late-type (M7) dwarf SSSPMJ2003-4433 and the ultracool subdwarf SSSPMJ1930-4311 (sdM7) sharing the same very large proper motion of about 860mas/yr were found in the same sky region with an angular separation of about 6°. From the comparison with other high proper motion catalogues we have estimated the probability of a chance alignment of the two new large proper motions to be less than 0.3%. From the individually estimated spectroscopic distances of about 38+10–7pc and 72+21–16pc, respectively for the M7 dwarf and the sdM7 subdwarf, and in view of the accurate agreement in their large proper motions we assume a common distance of about 50pc and a projected physical separation of about 5pc. The mean heliocentric space velocity of the pair (U,V,W)=(-232, -170, +74)km/s, based on the correctness of the preliminary radial velocity measurement for only one of the components and on the assumption of a common distance and velocity vector, is typical of the Galactic halo population. The large separation and the different metallicities of dwarfs and subdwarfs make a common formation scenario as a wide binary (later disrupted) improbable, although there remains some uncertainty in the spectroscopic classification scheme of ultracool dwarfs/subdwarfs so that a dissolved binary origin cannot be fully ruled out yet. It seems more likely that this wide pair is part of an old halo stream. Higher-resolution spectroscopic observations are needed to measure accurate radial velocities of both components. Further, we suggest to check the M7 dwarf for an unresolved binary status, which would explain its shorter spectroscopic distance estimate, and to place both objects on a trigonometric parallax program.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): stars: kinematics - stars: low-mass, brown dwarfs - Galaxy: formation - Galaxy: halo - solar neighbourhood

Simbad objects: 30

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Number of rows : 30
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2023
#notes
1 BD+66 34 ** 00 32 29.43301 +67 14 08.4138           M2V+M3V 119 1
2 BD+66 34A Er* 00 32 29.5078336041 +67 14 09.139006503   12.16 10.327     M2V 133 1
3 BD+66 34B PM* 00 32 29.5866515154 +67 14 03.798281437   14.2 12.19 11.0   M3V 57 1
4 Ross 318 Er* 01 02 32.2354294685 +71 40 47.336260174   11.736   9.1   M3.0V 160 0
5 BD-01 306 PM* 02 14 40.2989460555 -01 12 05.123909214 9.60 9.631 9.066 8.712 8.377 G0 145 0
6 G 75-31 PM* 02 38 21.5033134703 +02 26 44.370557521   10.968 10.424 10.389   sd?F8 62 0
7 HD 26169 Pe* 04 00 52.4379302184 -75 36 11.436994836 9.58 9.53 8.80 8.51 8.73 G3wpec 78 0
8 * iot UMa A SB* 08 59 12.4531549177 +48 02 30.562298470   3.36 3.13     A7V(n) 254 0
9 * iot UMa ** 08 59 12.45362 +48 02 30.5741 3.40 3.33 3.14 2.92 2.85 A6 295 0
10 NAME * iot UMa BC ** 08 59 12.5000 +48 02 34.000   10.8 8.9     M1V 35 0
11 * 10 UMa SB* 09 00 38.38067 +41 46 58.6051 4.440 4.390 3.960 3.57 3.35 F3V+G5V 344 0
12 NAME NGP reg 12 51 26.275 +27 07 41.70           ~ 1148 0
13 NAME Proxima Centauri Er* 14 29 42.9461331854 -62 40 46.164680672 14.21 12.95 11.13 9.45 7.41 M5.5Ve 1244 0
14 LP 440-52 LM* 14 39 00.3086540071 +18 39 38.710151529   19.6 18.39 17.3 14.64 sdM7 63 0
15 * alf Cen B PM* 14 39 35.06311 -60 50 15.0992 2.89 2.21 1.33     K1V 1006 2
16 * alf Cen A SB* 14 39 36.49400 -60 50 02.3737 0.96 0.72 0.01     G2V 1259 1
17 * alf Cen ** 14 39 40.4 -60 50 20   0.4 -0.1     G2V+K1V 936 0
18 LP 859-1 LM* 15 04 16.1763702958 -23 55 56.566174303         14.652 M7.5Ve 25 0
19 LP 861-6 PM* 15 59 38.6523402570 -22 25 42.401854673   15.5 14.267 13.221 11.989 ~ 10 0
20 HD 151698 PM* 16 39 07.5071574192 +77 52 10.027844688   9.13 8.06 7.4   K0 18 0
21 NAME Galactic Center reg 17 45 39.60213 -29 00 22.0000           ~ 13903 0
22 SSSPM J1930-4311 PM* 19 29 41.0053369204 -43 10 36.265058294       18.42 16.32 sdM7 9 1
23 SSSPM J2003-4433 PM* 20 02 52.0843298724 -44 33 03.915698621           M8 7 1
24 V* VW Cep EB* 20 37 21.6316723003 +75 36 01.894463230   8.13   7.0   G8V+K0V 546 0
25 V* AT Mic Er* 20 41 51.15925 -32 26 06.8283 12.753 11.909 10.343 9.098 7.383 M4.5Ve+M4.5Ve 355 0
26 V* AT Mic B PM* 20 41 51.1602483321 -32 26 10.230816719   12.64 11.34 10.79   M4.5Ve 85 0
27 HD 197481 BY* 20 45 09.5324974119 -31 20 27.237889841   10.05 8.627 9.078 6.593 M1VeBa1 1104 0
28 HD 199476 PM* 20 51 44.9430122960 +74 46 49.180344645 8.64 8.51 7.81 7.25 6.86 G8 107 0
29 V* TW PsA BY* 22 56 24.0525564918 -31 33 56.030584767   7.58 6.48     K4Ve 291 0
30 * alf PsA PM* 22 57 39.04625 -29 37 20.0533 1.31 1.25 1.16 1.11 1.09 A4V 1216 3

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2023.09.30-09:33:53

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