Showing posts with label T-type brown dwarf. Show all posts
Showing posts with label T-type brown dwarf. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 20, 2025

Rare quadruple star system could unlock mystery of brown dwarfs

An artist's impression of the UPM J1040−3551 system against the backdrop of the Milky Way as observed by Gaia. On the left, UPM J1040−3551 Aa & Ab appears as a distant bright orange dot, with an inset revealing these two M-type stars in orbit. On the right, in the foreground, a pair of cold brown dwarfs – UPM J1040−3551 Ba & Bb – orbit each other for a period of decades while collectively circling UPM J1040−3551 Aab in a vast orbit that takes over 100,000 years to complete. Credit: Jiaxin Zhong/Zenghua Zhang
Licence type: Attribution (CC BY 4.0)

The "exciting" discovery of an extremely rare quadruple star system could significantly advance our understanding of brown dwarfs, astronomers say.

These mysterious objects are too big to be considered a planet but also too small to be a star because they lack the mass to keep fusing atoms and blossom into fully-fledged suns.

In a new breakthrough published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (MNRAS), astronomers have now identified an extremely rare hierarchical quadruple star system consisting of a pair of cold brown dwarfs orbiting a pair of young red dwarf stars, located 82 light-years from Earth in the constellation Antlia.

The system, named UPM J1040−3551 AabBab, was identified by an international research team led by Professor Zenghua Zhang, of Nanjing University.

The researchers made their discovery using common angular velocity measured by the European Space Agency’s Gaia astrometric satellite and NASA\s Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE), followed by comprehensive spectroscopic observations and analysis.

That’s because this wide binary pair need more than 100,000 years to complete one orbit around each other, so their orbital motion cannot be seen in years. Researchers therefore had to analyse how they are moving towards the same direction with the same angular velocity.

In this system, Aab refers to the brighter stellar pair Aa and Ab, while Bab refers to the fainter substellar pair Ba and Bb.

"What makes this discovery particularly exciting is the hierarchical nature of the system, which is required for its orbit to remain stable over a long time period," said Professor Zhang.

"These two pairs of objects are orbiting each other separately for periods of decades, while the pairs are also orbiting a common centre of mass over a period of more than 100,000 years."

The two pairs are separated by 1,656 astronomical units (au), where 1 au equals the Earth-Sun distance. The brighter pair, UPM J1040−3551 Aab, consists of two nearly equal-mass red dwarf stars, which appear orange in colour when observed in visible wavelengths.

With a visual magnitude of 14.6, this pair is approximately 100,000 times fainter than Polaris (the North Star) in visible wavelengths. In fact, no red dwarf star is bright enough to be seen with the naked eye – not even Proxima Centauri, our closest stellar neighbour at 4.2 light-years away. To make UPM J1040−3551 Aab visible without optical aid, this binary pair would need to be brought to within 1.5 light-years of Earth, placing it closer than any star in our current cosmic neighbourhood.

The fainter pair, UPM J1040−3551 Bab, comprises two much cooler brown dwarfs that emit virtually no visible light and appear roughly 1,000 times dimmer than the Aab pair when observed in near-infrared wavelengths, where they are most easily detected.

The close binary nature of UPM J1040−3551 Aab was initially suspected due to its wobbling photocentre during Gaia's observations and confirmed by its unusual brightness – approximately 0.7 magnitude brighter than a single star with the same temperature at the same distance, as the combined light from the nearly equal-mass pair effectively doubles the output.

Similarly, UPM J1040−3551 Bab was identified as another close binary through its abnormally bright infrared measurements compared to typical brown dwarfs of its spectral type. Spectral fitting analysis strongly supported this conclusion, with binary templates providing a significantly better match than single-object templates.

Dr Felipe Navarete, of the Brazilian National Astrophysics Laboratory, led the critical spectroscopic observations that helped characterise the system components.

Using the Goodman spectrograph on the Southern Astrophysical Research (SOAR) Telescope at Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory in Chile, a Program of NSF NOIRLab, Dr Navarete obtained optical spectra of the brighter pair, while also capturing near-infrared spectra of the fainter pair with SOAR's TripleSpec instrument.

"These observations were challenging due to the faintness of the brown dwarfs," said Dr Navarete, "but the capabilities of SOAR allowed us to collect the crucial spectroscopic data needed to understand the nature of these objects."

Their analysis revealed that both components of the brighter pair are M-type red dwarfs with temperatures of approximately 3,200 Kelvin (about 2,900°C) and masses of about 17 per cent that of the Sun.

The fainter pair are more exotic objects: two T-type brown dwarfs with temperatures of 820 Kelvin (550°C) and 690 Kelvin (420°C), respectively.

Brown dwarfs are small and dense low-mass objects, with the brown dwarfs in this system having sizes similar to the planet Jupiter but masses estimated to be 10-30 times greater. Indeed, at the low end of this range these objects could be considered "planetary mass" objects.

"This is the first quadruple system ever discovered with a pair of T-type brown dwarfs orbiting two stars," said Dr MariCruz Gálvez-Ortiz of the Center for Astrobiology in Spain, a co-author of the research paper.

"The discovery provides a unique cosmic laboratory for studying these mysterious objects."

Unlike stars, brown dwarfs continuously cool throughout their lifetime, which changes their observable properties such as temperature, luminosity, and spectral features.

This cooling process creates a fundamental challenge in brown dwarf research known as the "age-mass degeneracy problem".

An isolated brown dwarf with a certain temperature could be a younger, less massive object or an older, more massive one – astronomers cannot distinguish between these possibilities without additional information.

"Brown dwarfs with wide stellar companions whose ages can be determined independently are invaluable at breaking this degeneracy as age benchmarks," explained Professor Hugh Jones, of the University of Hertfordshire, a co-author of the research paper.

"UPM J1040−3551 is particularly valuable because H-alpha emission from the brighter pair indicates the system is relatively young, between 300 million and 2 billion years old."

The team believes the brown dwarf pair (UPM J1040−3551 Bab) could potentially be resolved with high-resolution imaging techniques in the future, enabling precise measurements of their orbital motion and dynamical masses.

"This system offers a dual benefit for brown dwarf science," said co-researcher Professor Adam Burgasser, of the University of California San Diego.

"It can serve as an age benchmark to calibrate low-temperature atmosphere models, and as a mass benchmark to test evolutionary models if we can resolve the brown dwarf binary and track its orbit."

The discovery of the UPM J1040−3551 system represents a significant advancement in he understanding of these elusive objects and the diverse formation paths for stellar systems in the neighbourhood of the Sun.




Media contacts:

Sam Tonkin (Submitted by)
Royal Astronomical Society
Mob: +44 (0)7802 877 700

press@ras.ac.uk

Science contacts:

Professor Zenghua Zhang
Nanjing University

zz@nju.edu.cn



Further information

The paper ‘Benchmark brown dwarfs – I. A blue M2 + T5 wide binary and a probable young M4 + [T7 + T8] hierarchical triple’ by Zenghua, Zhang et al. has been published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. DOI:10.1093/mnras/staf895.



Notes for editors

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Wednesday, January 25, 2023

Direct Imaging Uncovers a Giant Planet-Like Brown Dwarf in the Hyades Cluster


Figure 1: Image of the brown dwarf HIP 21152 B, discovered as the companion of the star HIP 21152. The star mark and arrow indicate the positions of the host star and HIP 21152 B, respectively. The host star is masked in the image. HIP 21152 is a young Sun-like star, about 750 million years old, and belongs to the Hyades Cluster, one of the nearest open clusters, located 160 light-years away in the direction of the constellation Taurus. As a group of young stars born at almost the same time, the Hyades Cluster is an important research target for studying the evolution of stars and planets, and has attracted the attention of many astronomers. HIP 21152 B is the first confirmed example of a directly-imaged brown dwarf companion in the Hyades cluster. Click here to see a movie of three imaging observations taken from October 2020 to October 2021. Credit: Astrobiology Center

A brown dwarf orbiting the Sun-like star HIP 21152 was discovered using the Subaru Telescope's Extreme Adaptive Optics System. HIP 21152 B was found to be the lightest brown dwarf with an accurately determined mass, approaching the mass of a giant planet. HIP 21152 B is expected to be a benchmark object for the study of the evolution of giant planets and brown dwarfs and their atmospheres.

Brown dwarfs (Note 1) are an interesting type of objects that is intermediate between a star and a planet in terms of mass and not found in our Solar System. They are also useful for studying the evolution and the atmosphere of giant planets, because Jupiter-like planets and lighter brown dwarfs are expected to have similar characteristics.

Brown dwarfs drift alone in space or orbit around stars. While thousands of brown dwarfs have been found since the first discovery in 1995, companion-type brown dwarfs are rare, with a frequency of only a few per 100 stars. For this reason, astronomers have tried to establish an efficient way to find companion brown dwarfs.

An international team including astronomers from the Astrobiology Center; the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan; Tokyo Institute of Technology; the University of California, Santa Barbara; and NASA has developed a new method to efficiently discover companion brown dwarfs and giant planets. Furthermore, they applied that method to imaging surveys with the Subaru Telescope. This search adopts information on the "proper motion" of stars in our Galaxy, which is the motion of stars with their own unique velocities. When a companion object orbits a star, the proper motion of the host star is accelerated by the gravity from the companion. However, the acceleration caused by a brown dwarf or planet is very small, making it challenging to measure the change precisely.

However, a turning point came with ESA's astrometry satellite Gaia (Note 2), the successor to the Hipparcos satellite. The calculation of the difference between the measurements from the two satellites now allows for deriving minute accelerations in proper motion (Figure 2 left). Using data from both telescopes, the research team analyzed the acceleration of proper motion for stars near the Sun, and selected stars that may be accompanied by giant planets or brown dwarfs. They then proceeded with direct imaging observations using Subaru Telescope's high contrast instruments, SCExAO and CHARIS, leading to the discovery of a brown dwarf "HIP 21152 B" orbiting the star HIP 21152.


Figure 2: (Left) Schematic of the acceleration of proper motion. If a companion is present around a star, it’s gravity accelerates the proper motion of the star, causing a difference in the proper motion measurements between the Hipparcos and Gaia satellites. (Right) Orbit modeling of HIP 21152 B. The open circles and blue circles indicate the predicted and observed positions of HIP 21152 B in the numbered years, respectively. The thick black oval shows the best-fit orbit. Other thin ovals represent other possible orbits, which are color-coded by the derived mass of HIP 21152 B. A magnified view of the area around the observed locations is shown in the lower left. Credit: Astrobiology Center

The team determined the orbit of HIP 21152 B using a combination of a total of four direct imaging observations by the Subaru Telescope and Keck Telescope, line-of-sight velocities of the host star measured by HIDES on the Okayama 188-cm Reflector Telescope, and the proper motion data from Gaia and Hipparcos. The companion's mass is derived from the orbit, as indicated by Kepler's law. The actual orbital analysis (Figure 2, right) determined the mass of HIP 21152 B to be 22-36 Jupiter masses. Brown dwarfs with such accurately determined masses are rare (Note 3). HIP 21152 B was also found to be the lightest brown dwarf among those with accurately determined masses, approaching planetary masses (Note 4).

HIP 21152 B will help characterize the atmospheres of brown dwarfs and giant planets. The team also obtained the spectrum of HIP 21152 B (Figure 3), showing that its atmospheric characteristics can be classified as being in the transition stage between two brown dwarf spectral types, L-type and T-type. Strong absorption from methane is shown in the atmosphere of a T-type brown dwarf, while an L-type brown dwarf shows little of it in the atmosphere. This spectral transition is strongly related to atmospheric temperature and the presence of clouds. Interestingly, the well-known directly-imaged planets around HR 8799 show a similar spectrum. In this respect, it is again crucial that the most fundamental characteristics of HIP 21152 B, namely its mass and age, are accurately determined. Masayuki Kuzuhara, a project assistant professor at the Astrobiology Center, who led the research, says, "This result can provide an important clue to understand the atmospheres of giant planets and brown dwarfs based on how and when they show atmospheric characteristics similar to those seen in the planets of the HR 8799 system and HIP 21152 B. It is expected that HIP 21152 B will play an important role as a benchmark for future progress in astronomy and planetary science."


Figure 3: Spectrum of HIP 21152 B obtained with SCExAO and CHARIS on the Subaru Telescope (blue line). Wavelengths where absorption by water vapor and methane occur are indicated by the horizontal lines above (Note 5). The absorption by those molecules in the atmosphere of HIP 21152 B produces concavities in the spectrum. Credit: Astrobiology Center

As this observation project is still ongoing, even more discoveries are expected. The Subaru Telescope's direct imaging instruments continue to be improved, making new observational capabilities ready for science operation. With the progress in the efficient exploration and the development and improvement of Subaru Telescope's instruments, various important discoveries will continue to be made in the future.

These results were published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters on July 27, 2022 (Kuzuhara et al., "Direct-imaging Discovery and Dynamical Mass of a Substellar Companion Orbiting an Accelerating Hyades Sun-like Star with SCExAO/CHARIS".) It was also featured in AAS Nova, which highlights outstanding research in the AAS journals (Featured Image: First Images of a Substellar Companion in the Hyades).



Notes:

(Note 1) There are several ways to define a "brown dwarf" but the most generally accepted is objects with masses as high as 13 and 80 times that of Jupiter. Objects with such masses do not fuse hydrogen (unlike stars) but do fuse deuterium (unlike planets). In contrast, heavy planets and light brown dwarfs are very similar, and it is thought that there is no need to distinguish between them except for their mass.

(Note 2) Gaia is a space telescope launched in 2013 for high-precision astrometry. It measures distances and proper motions of about one billion astronomical objects with unprecedented precision.


(Note 3) So far, the main method used to estimate the mass of brown dwarfs has been the "evolutionary models," which predict the luminosity and temperature of a brown dwarf as it ages. Then the observed luminosity and temperature are used to determine the mass of the brown dwarf using these models. However, this method could result in an inaccurate estimation of mass due to uncertainties in the evolutionary model and the age (usually, a brown dwarf is assumed to be as young as its host star or the associated cluster). HIP 21152 B belongs to the Hyades cluster, so its age is accurately determined, but the evolutionary model remains uncertain. The evolutionary model inferred mass of HIP 21152 B is 1.3 times larger than the mass determined from the orbital analysis.

(Note 4) A European team independently imaged HIP 21152 B (myScience article). Meanwhile, the study led by Kuzuhara is the first to prove that HIP 21152 B orbits its host star and to derive its dynamical mass. Very recently, a U.S. team also reported the independent detection of HIP 21152 B.

(Note 5) The absorption wavelengths of the molecules are displayed based on the web tool provided by the University of Geneva.

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