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The extremely red, young L dwarf PSO J318.5338-22.8603: A free-floating planetary-mass analog to directly imaged young gas-giant planets

  • Michael C. Liu
  • , Eugene A. Magnier
  • , Niall R. Deacon
  • , Katelyn N. Allers
  • , Trent J. Dupuy
  • , Michael C. Kotson
  • , Kimberly M. Aller
  • , W. S. Burgett
  • , K. C. Chambers
  • , P. W. Draper
  • , K. W. Hodapp
  • , R. Jedicke
  • , N. Kaiser
  • , R. P. Kudritzki
  • , N. Metcalfe
  • , J. S. Morgan
  • , P. A. Price
  • , J. L. Tonry
  • , R. J. Wainscoat

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    232 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    We have discovered using Pan-STARRS1 an extremely red late-L dwarf, which has (J-K)MKO = 2.78 and (J-K)2MASS = 2.84, making it the reddest known field dwarf and second only to 2MASS J1207-39b among substellar companions. Near-IR spectroscopy shows a spectral type of L7 ± 1 and reveals a triangular H-band continuum and weak alkali (K I and Na I) lines, hallmarks of low surface gravity. Near-IR astrometry from the Hawaii Infrared Parallax Program gives a distance of 24.6 ± 1.4 pc and indicates a much fainter J-band absolute magnitude than field L dwarfs. The position and kinematics of PSO J318.5-22 point to membership in the β Pic moving group. Evolutionary models give a temperature of 1160 K and a mass of 6.5 M Jup, making PSO J318.5-22 one of the lowest mass free-floating objects in the solar neighborhood. This object adds to the growing list of low-gravity field L dwarfs and is the first to be strongly deficient in methane relative to its estimated temperature. Comparing their spectra suggests that young L dwarfs with similar ages and temperatures can have different spectral signatures of youth. For the two objects with well constrained ages (PSO J318.5-22 and 2MASS J0355+11), we find their temperatures are ≈400 K cooler than field objects of similar spectral type but their luminosities are similar, i.e., these young L dwarfs are very red and unusually cool but not "underluminous." Altogether, PSO J318.5-22 is the first free-floating object with the colors, magnitudes, spectrum, luminosity, and mass that overlap the young dusty planets around HR 8799 and 2MASS J1207-39.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article numberL20
    JournalAstrophysical Journal Letters
    Volume777
    Issue number2
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 10 Nov 2013

    Keywords

    • brown dwarfs
    • parallaxes
    • planets and satellites: atmospheres
    • proper motions
    • solar neighborhood
    • surveys

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