Discovery of a Brown Dwarf with Quasi-spherical Mass Loss

  • Ruíz-Rodríguez D
  • Cieza L
  • Casassus S
  • et al.
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Abstract

We report the serendipitous discovery of an elliptical shell of CO associated with the faint stellar object SSTc2d J163134.1-240060 as part of the “Ophiuchus Disk Survey Employing ALMA” (ODISEA), a project aiming to study the entire population of protoplanetary disks in the Ophiuchus Molecular Cloud from 230 GHz continuum emission and 12 CO ( J = 2–1), 13 CO ( J = 2–1) and C 18 CO ( J = 2–1) lines readable in Band 6. Remarkably, we detect a bright 12 CO elliptical shape emission of ∼3″ × 4″ toward SSTc2d J163134.1-240060 without a 230 GHz continuum detection. Based on the observed near-IR spectrum taken with the Very Large Telescope (KMOS), the brightness of the source, its three-dimensional motion, and Galactic dynamic arguments, we conclude that the source is not a giant star in the distant background (>5–10 kpc) and is most likely to be a young brown dwarf in the Ophiuchus cloud, at a distance of just ∼139 pc. This is the first report of quasi-spherical mass loss in a young brown dwarf. We suggest that the observed shell could be associated with a thermal pulse produced by the fusion of deuterium, which is not yet well understood, but for a substellar object is expected to occur during a short period of time at an age of a few Myr, in agreement with the ages of the objects in the region. Other more exotic scenarios, such as a merger with planetary companions, cannot be ruled out from the current observations.

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Ruíz-Rodríguez, D. A., Cieza, L. A., Casassus, S., Almendros-Abad, V., Jofré, P., Muzic, K., … Zurlo, A. (2022). Discovery of a Brown Dwarf with Quasi-spherical Mass Loss. The Astrophysical Journal, 938(1), 54. https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ac8ff5

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