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Direct-imaging Discovery and Dynamical Mass of a Substellar Companion Orbiting an Accelerating Hyades Sun-like Star with SCExAO/CHARIS

Authors :
Masayuki Kuzuhara
Thayne Currie
Takuya Takarada
Timothy D. Brandt
Bun’ei Sato
Taichi Uyama
Markus Janson
Jeffrey Chilcote
Taylor Tobin
Kellen Lawson
Yasunori Hori
Olivier Guyon
Tyler D Groff
Michael W McElwain
Tyler D. Groff
Julien Lozi
Sebastien Vievard
Ananya Sahoo
Vincent Deo
Nemanja Jovanovic
Kyohoon Ahn
Frantz Martinache
Nour Skaf
Eiji Akiyama
Barnaby R Norris
Mickaël Bonnefoy
Krzysztof G Hełminiak
Tomoyuki Kudo
Matthias Samland
Kevin R Wagner
John Wisniewski
Gillian R Knapp
Jungmi Kwon
Jun Nishikawa
Eugene Serabyn
Masahiko Hayashi
Motohide Tamura
Source :
Astrophysical Journal Letters. 934(2)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2022.

Abstract

We present the direct-imaging discovery of a substellar companion in orbit around a Sun-like star member of the Hyades open cluster. So far, no other substellar companions have been unambiguously confirmed via direct imaging around main-sequence stars in Hyades. The star HIP 21152 is an accelerating star as identified by the astrometry from the Gaia and Hipparcos satellites. We detected the companion, HIP 21152 B, in multiple epochs using the high-contrast imaging from SCExAO/CHARIS and Keck/NIRC2. We also obtained the stellar radialvelocity data from the Okayama 188 cm telescope. The CHARIS spectroscopy reveals that HIP 21152 B’s spectrum is consistent with the L/T transition, best fit by an early T dwarf. Our orbit modeling determines the semimajor axis and the dynamical mass of HIP 21152 B to be 17 +7.2−3.8 and 27.8 +8.4−5.4 MJub, respectively. The mass ratio of HIP 21152 B relative to its host is ≈2%, near the planet/brown dwarf boundary suggested by recent surveys. Mass estimates inferred from luminosity-evolution models are slightly higher (33–42 MJup). With a dynamical mass and a well-constrained age due to the system’s Hyades membership, HIP 21152 B will become a critical benchmark in understanding the formation, evolution, and atmosphere of a substellar object as a function of mass and age. Our discovery is yet another key proof of concept for using precision astrometry to select direct-imaging targets.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20418213 and 20418205
Volume :
934
Issue :
2
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Journal :
Astrophysical Journal Letters
Notes :
411672.07.04.02.01, , 80NSSC20K0253
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20230009660
Document Type :
Report
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/ac772f