Bibcode
Persson, Carina M.; Csizmadia, Szilárd; Mustill, Alexander J.; Fridlund, Malcolm; Hatzes, Artie P.; Nowak, Grzegorz; Georgieva, Iskra; Gandolfi, Davide; Davies, Melvyn B.; Livingston, John H.; Palle, Enric; Montañes Rodríguez, Pilar; Endl, Michael; Hirano, Teruyuki; Prieto-Arranz, Jorge; Korth, Judith; Grziwa, Sascha; Esposito, Massimiliano; Albrecht, Simon; Johnson, Marshall C.; Barragán, Oscar; Parviainen, Hannu; Van Eylen, Vincent; Alonso Sobrino, Roi; Beck, Paul G.; Cabrera, Juan; Carleo, Ilaria; Cochran, William D.; Dai, Fei; Deeg, Hans J.; de Leon, Jerome P.; Eigmüller, Philipp; Erikson, Anders; Fukui, Akai; González-Cuesta, Lucía; Guenther, Eike W.; Hidalgo, Diego; Hjorth, Maria; Kabath, Petr; Knudstrup, Emil; Kusakabe, Nobuhiko; Lam, Kristine W. F.; Lund, Mikkel N.; Luque, Rafael; Mathur, Savita; Murgas, Felipe; Narita, Norio; Nespral, David; Niraula, Prajwal; Olofsson, A. O. Henrik; Pätzold, Martin; Rauer, Heike; Redfield, Seth; Ribas, Ignasi; Skarka, Marek; Smith, Alexis M. S.; Subjak, Jan; Tamura, Motohide
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 628, id.A64, 14 pp.
Advertised on:
8
2019
Journal
Citations
23
Refereed citations
22
Description
Context. Although more than 2000 brown dwarfs have been detected to
date, mainly from direct imaging, their characterisation is difficult
due to their faintness and model-dependent results. In the case of
transiting brown dwarfs, however, it is possible to make direct
high-precision observations. Aims: Our aim is to investigate the
nature and formation of brown dwarfs by adding a new well-characterised
object, in terms of its mass, radius and bulk density, to the currently
small sample of less than 20 transiting brown dwarfs. Methods:
One brown dwarf candidate was found by the KESPRINT consortium when
searching for exoplanets in the K2 space mission Campaign 16 field. We
combined the K2 photometric data with a series of multicolour
photometric observations, imaging, and radial velocity measurements to
rule out false positive scenarios and to determine the fundamental
properties of the system. Results: We report the discovery and
characterisation of a transiting brown dwarf in a 5.17-day eccentric
orbit around the slightly evolved F7 V star EPIC 212036875. We find a
stellar mass of 1.15 ± 0.08 M⊙, a stellar radius
of 1.41 ± 0.05 R⊙, and an age of 5.1 ± 0.9
Gyr. The mass and radius of the companion brown dwarf are 51 ± 2
MJ and 0.83 ± 0.03 RJ, respectively,
corresponding to a mean density of 108-13+15 g
cm-3. Conclusions: EPIC 212036875 b is a rare object
that resides in the brown-dwarf desert. In the mass-density diagram for
planets, brown dwarfs, and stars, we find that all giant planets and
brown dwarfs follow the same trend from 0.3 MJ to the
turn-over to hydrogen burning stars at 73 MJ. EPIC
212036875 b falls close to the theoretical model for mature H/He
dominated objects in this diagram as determined by interior structure
models. We argue that EPIC 212036875 b formed via gravitational disc
instabilities in the outer part of the disc, followed by a quick
migration. Orbital tidal circularisation may have started early in its
history for a brief period when the brown dwarf's radius was larger. The
lack of spin-orbit synchronisation points to a weak stellar dissipation
parameter (Q⋆' ≳ 108), which
implies a circularisation timescale of ≳23 Gyr, or suggests an
interaction between the magnetic and tidal forces of the star and the
brown dwarf.
Table 2 is only available at the CDS via anonymous ftp to http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr
(ftp://130.79.128.5) or via http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr/viz-bin/qcat?J/A+A/628/A64This
work is done under the framework of the KESPRINT collaboration (http://kesprint.science). KESPRINT is
an international consortium devoted to the characterisation and research
of exoplanets discovered with space-based missions.
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