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Discovery of a young low-mass brown dwarf transiting a fast-rotating F-type star by the Galactic Plane eXoplanet (GPX) survey

Authors :
Andrew Vanderburg
F. Grau Horta
Eric L. N. Jensen
R. Naves
F. Kashaev
Michaël Gillon
W. Kang
Stan Shadick
Ş. Torun
V. V. Dyachenko
A. Bonfanti
A. Burdanov
Elisa V. Quintana
George R. Ricker
D. Molina
Olivier Demangeon
Francisco J. Pozuelos
Flavien Kiefer
Joshua Pepper
Sara Seager
M. Banfi
I. A. Sokova
A. A. Mitrofanova
A. Wunsche
V. Krushinsky
E. N. Sokov
Paul Wilson
Roland Vanderspek
Michael D. Joner
Chris Henze
Fabio Salvaggio
E. Pakštienė
E. Girardin
G. Valyavin
E. D. Kuznetsov
Guillaume Hébrard
A. Belinski
S. Dalal
David W. Latham
Keivan G. Stassun
J. Garlitz
D. A. Rastegaev
Özgür Baştürk
V.-P. Hentunen
A. Beskakotov
K. Antonyuk
Zouhair Benkhaldoun
Y. Jongen
T. Kim
M. Spencer
Emmanuel Jehin
Allyson Bieryla
Daniel J. Stevens
Karen A. Collins
Jose-Manuel Almenara
Susan E. Mullally
Alessandro Marchini
M. Bretton
David Charbonneau
A. A. Popov
M. Tsantaki
K. Ivanov
Jon M. Jenkins
Khalid Barkaoui
Riccardo Papini
Selçuk Yalçınkaya
P. Benni
Source :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., arXiv

Abstract

We announce the discovery of GPX-1 b, a transiting brown dwarf with a mass of $19.7\pm 1.6$ $M_{\mathrm{Jup}}$ and a radius of $1.47\pm0.10$ $R_{\mathrm{Jup}}$, the first sub-stellar object discovered by the Galactic Plane eXoplanet (GPX) survey. The brown dwarf transits a moderately bright ($V$ = 12.3 mag) fast-rotating F-type star with a projected rotational velocity $v\sin{ i_*}=40\pm10$ km/s. We use the isochrone placement algorithm to characterize the host star, which has effective temperature $7000\pm200$ K, mass $1.68\pm0.10$ $M_{\mathrm{Sun}}$, radius $1.56\pm0.10$ $R_{\mathrm{Sun}}$ and approximate age $0.27_{-0.15}^{+0.09}$ Gyr. GPX-1 b has an orbital period of $\sim$1.75 d, and a transit depth of $0.90\pm0.03$ %. We describe the GPX transit detection observations, subsequent photometric and speckle-interferometric follow-up observations, and SOPHIE spectroscopic measurements, which allowed us to establish the presence of a sub-stellar object around the host star. GPX-1 was observed at 30-min integrations by TESS in Sector 18, but the data is affected by blending with a 3.4 mag brighter star 42 arcsec away. GPX-1 b is one of about two dozen transiting brown dwarfs known to date, with a mass close to the theoretical brown dwarf/gas giant planet mass transition boundary. Since GPX-1 is a moderately bright and fast-rotating star, it can be followed-up by the means of Doppler tomography.<br />13 pages, 13 figures, accepted to MNRAS in May 2021

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13652966 and 00358711
Volume :
505
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2f8fd864697f1790ebaf3f0e747b0790
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stab1567