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TOI-503: The First Known Brown-dwarf Am-star Binary from the TESS Mission

Authors :
Jan Subjak
Rishikesh Sharma
Theron W. Carmichael
Marshall C. Johnson
Erica J. Gonzales
Elisabeth Matthews
Henri M. J. Boffin
Rafael Brahm
Priyanka Chaturvedi
Abhijit Chakraborty
David R. Ciardi
Karen A. Collins
Massimiliano Esposito
Malcolm Fridlund
Tianjun Gan
Davide Gandolfi
Rafael A. García
Eike Guenther
Artie Hatzes
David W. Latham
Stéphane Mathis
Savita Mathur
Carina M. Persson
Howard M. Relles
Joshua E Schlieder
Thomas Barclay
Courtney D. Dressing
Ian Crossfield
Andrew W. Howard
Florian Rodler
George Zhou
Samuel N. Quinn
Gilbert A. Esquerdo
Michael L. Calkins
Perry Berlind
Keivan G. Stassun
Martin Blažek
Marek Skarka
Magdalena Spoková
Jirí Zák
Simon Albrecht
Roi Alonso Sobrino
Paul Beck
Juan Cabrera
Ilaria Carleo
William D. Cochran
Szilard Csizmadia
Fei Dai
Hans J. Deeg
Jerome P. de Leon
Philipp Eigmüller
Michael Endl
Anders Erikson
Akihiko Fukui
Iskra Georgieva
Lucía González-Cuesta
Sascha Grziwa
Diego Hidalgo
Teruyuki Hirano
Maria Hjorth
Emil Knudstrup
Judith Korth
Kristine W. F. Lam
John H. Livingston
Mikkel N. Lund
Rafael Luque
Pilar Montanes Rodríguez
Felipe Murgas
Norio Narita
David Nespral
Prajwal Niraula
Grzegorz Nowak
Enric Pallé
Martin Pätzold
Jorge Prieto-Arranz
Heike Rauer
Seth Redfield
Ignasi Ribas
Alexis M. S. Smith
Vincent Van Eylen
Petr Kabáth
Source :
The Astronomical Journal. 159(151)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2020.

Abstract

We report the discovery of an intermediate-mass transiting brown dwarf (BD), TOI-503b, from the TESS mission. TOI-503b is the first BD discovered by TESS, and it has circular orbit around a metallic-line A-type star with a period of P=3.6772±0.0001 days. The light curve from TESS indicates that TOI-503b transits its host star in a grazing manner, which limits the precision with which we measure the BD’s radius R(b) = 1.34(+0.26, -0.15)R(J). We obtained high resolution spectroscopic observations with the FIES, Ondrejov, PARAS, Tautenburg, and TRES spectrographs, and measured the mass of TOI-503b to be M(b)=53.7±1.2 M(J). The host star has a mass of M(*)=1.80±0.06M(ʘ), a radius of R(*)=1.70±0.05R(ʘ), an effective temperature of T(eff)=7650±160 K, and a relatively high metallicity of 0.61±0.07 dex. We used stellar isochrones to derive the age of the system to be ∼180 Myr, which places its age between that of RIK 72b (a ∼10 Myr old BD in the Upper Scorpius stellar association) and AD 3116b (a ∼600 Myr old BD in the Praesepe cluster). Given the difficulty in measuring the tidal interactions between BDs and their host stars, we cannot precisely say whether this BD formed in situ or has had its orbit circularized by its host star over the relatively short age of the system. Instead, we offer an examination of plausible values for the tidal quality factor for the star and BD. TOI-503b joins a growing number of known short-period, intermediate-mass BDs orbiting main sequence stars, and is the second such BD known to transit an A star, after HATS-70b. With the growth in the population in this regime, the driest region in the BD desert (35–55M(J) sin i) is reforesting.

Subjects

Subjects :
Astronomy

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15383881 and 00046256
Volume :
159
Issue :
151
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Journal :
The Astronomical Journal
Notes :
80GSFC17M0002, , 17-XRP17 2-0024, , NAS5-26555
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20205004122
Document Type :
Report
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ab7245