Discovery of the Coldest Imaged Companion of a Sun-like Star

We present the discovery of a brown dwarf or possible planet at a projected separation of 19 = 29 AU around the star GJ 758, placing it between the separations at which substellar companions are expected to form by core accretion (~5 AU) or direct gravitational collapse (typically 100 AU). The objec...

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Veröffentlicht in:Astrophysical journal. Letters 2009-12, Vol.707 (2), p.L123-L127
Hauptverfasser: Thalmann, C, Carson, J, Janson, M, Goto, M, McElwain, M, Egner, S, Feldt, M, Hashimoto, J, Hayano, Y, Henning, T, Hodapp, K. W, Kandori, R, Klahr, H, Kudo, T, Kusakabe, N, Mordasini, C, Morino, J.-I, Suto, H, Suzuki, R, Tamura, M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We present the discovery of a brown dwarf or possible planet at a projected separation of 19 = 29 AU around the star GJ 758, placing it between the separations at which substellar companions are expected to form by core accretion (~5 AU) or direct gravitational collapse (typically 100 AU). The object was detected by direct imaging of its thermal glow with Subaru/HiCIAO. At 10-40 times the mass of Jupiter and a temperature of 550-640 K, GJ 758 B constitutes one of the few known T-type companions, and the coldest ever to be imaged in thermal light around a Sun-like star. Its orbit is likely eccentric and of a size comparable to Pluto's orbit, possibly as a result of gravitational scattering or outward migration. A candidate second companion is detected at 12 at one epoch.
ISSN:1538-4357
0004-637X
2041-8205
1538-4357
DOI:10.1088/0004-637X/707/2/L123