SIMBAD references

2015AJ....149..104B - Astron. J., 149, 104 (2015/March-0)

WISE J072003.20-084651.2: an old and active M9.5 + T5 spectral binary 6 pc from the Sun.

BURGASSER A.J., GILLON M., MELIS C., BOWLER B.P., MICHELSEN E.L., BARDALEZ GAGLIUFFI D., GELINO C.R., JEHIN E., DELREZ L., MANFROID J. and BLAKE C.H.

Abstract (from CDS):

We report observations of the recently discovered, nearby late-M dwarf WISE J072003.20-084651.2. New astrometric measurements obtained with the TRAPPIST telescope improve the distance measurement to 6.0±1.0 pc and confirm the low tangential velocity (3.5±0.6 km/s) reported by Scholz. Low-resolution optical spectroscopy indicates a spectral type of M9.5 and prominent Hα emission ((log10L/Lbol) = -4.68±0.06), but no evidence of subsolar metallicity or Li i absorption. Near-infrared spectroscopy reveals subtle peculiarities that can be explained by the presence of a T5 binary companion, and high-resolution laser guide star adaptive optics imaging reveals a faint (ΔH = 4.1) candidate source 0".14 (0.8 AU) from the primary. With high-resolution optical and near-infrared spectroscopy, we measure a stable radial velocity of +83.8±0.3 km/s, indicative of old disk kinematics and consistent with the angular separation of the possible companion. We measure a projected rotational velocity of v sin i = 8.0±0.5 km/s and find evidence of low-level variabilty (: (1.5%) in a 13 day TRAPPIST light curve, but cannot robustly constrain the rotational period. We also observe episodic changes in brightness (1%-2%) and occasional flare bursts (4%-8%) with a 0.8% duty cycle, and order-of-magnitude variations in Hα line strength. Combined, these observations reveal WISE J0720-0846 to be an old, very low-mass binary whose components straddle the hydrogen burning minimum mass, and whose primary is a relatively rapid rotator and magnetically active. It is one of only two known binaries among late M dwarfs within 10 pc of the Sun, both of which harbor a mid T-type brown dwarf companion. We show that while this specific configuration is rare (~< 1.6% probability), roughly 25% of binary companions to late-type M dwarfs in the local population are likely low-temperature T or Y brown dwarfs.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): binaries: spectroscopic - binaries: visual - brown dwarfs - stars: individual: WISE J072003.20-084651.2 - stars: low-mass - stars: magnetic field

Simbad objects: 27

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