4.7 Article

A THERMAL INFRARED IMAGING STUDY OF VERY LOW MASS, WIDE-SEPARATION BROWN DWARF COMPANIONS TO UPPER SCORPIUS STARS: CONSTRAINING CIRCUMSTELLAR ENVIRONMENTS

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 767, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/767/1/31

Keywords

brown dwarfs; circumstellar matter; instrumentation: adaptive optics; open clusters and associations: individual (Upper Scorpius); stars: individual (GSC 06214-00210, 1RXS 160929.1-210524, and HIP 78530)

Funding

  1. National Aeronautics and Space Administration
  2. National Science Foundation
  3. NASA [NSF 0705296]
  4. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship [NSF DGE-1143953]

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We present a 3-5 mu m LBT/MMT adaptive optics imaging study of three Upper Scorpius stars with brown dwarf (BD) companions with very low masses/mass ratios (M-BD < 25 M-Jup; M-BD/M-star approximate to 1%-2%) and wide separations (300-700 AU): GSC 06214, 1RXS 1609, and HIP 78530. We combine these new thermal IR data with existing 1-4 mu m and 24 mu m photometry to constrain the properties of the BDs and identify evidence for circumprimary/circumsecondary disks in these unusual systems. We confirm that GSC 06214B is surrounded by a disk, further showing that this disk produces a broadband IR excess due to small dust near the dust sublimation radius. An unresolved 24 mu m excess in the system may be explained by the contribution from this disk. 1RXS 1609B exhibits no 3-4 mu m excess, nor does its primary; however, the system as a whole has a modest 24 mu m excess, which may come from warm dust around the primary and/or BD. Neither object in the HIP 78530 system exhibits near- to mid-IR excesses. We additionally find that the 1-4 mu m colors of HIP 78530B match a spectral type of M3 +/- 2, inconsistent with the M8 spectral type assigned based on its near-IR spectrum, indicating that it may be a low-mass star rather than a BD. We present new upper limits on additional low-mass companions in the system (< 5 M-Jup beyond 175 AU). Finally, we examine the utility of circumsecondary disks as probes of the formation histories of wide BD companions, finding that the presence of a disk may disfavor BD formation near the primary with subsequent outward scattering.

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