4.7 Article

A young very low mass object surrounded by warm dust

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 571, Issue 2, Pages L155-L159

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/341361

Keywords

infrared : stars; stars : atmospheres; stars : fundamental parameters; stars : low-mass, brown dwarfs

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We present a complete low-resolution (R similar to 100) near-IR spectrum of the substellar object GY11, a member of the rho Ophiuchi young association. The object is remarkable because of its low estimated mass and age and because it is associated with a mid-IR source, an indication of a surrounding dusty disk. Based on the comparison of our spectrum with similar spectra of field M dwarfs and atmospheric models, we obtain revised estimates of the spectral type, effective temperature, and luminosity of the central object. These parameters are used to place the object on a H-R diagram and to compare it with the predictions of pre-main-sequence evolutionary models. Our analysis suggests that the central object has a very low mass, probably below the deuterium-burning limit and in the range of 8-12 M-J, and a young age of less than 1 Myr. The IR excess is shown to be consistent with the emission of a flared, irradiated disk similar to those found in more massive brown dwarf and T Tauri systems. This result suggests that substellar objects, even the so-called isolated planetary mass objects, found in young stellar associations are produced in a similar fashion as stars, by core contraction and gravitational collapse.

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