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28 March 2024
 
  » arxiv » astro-ph/0206022

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Imaging and spectroscopy of DENIS-P J104814-395606
Ralph Neuhaeuser ; Eike Guenther ; Joao Alves ; Nicolas Grosso ; Christoph Leinert ; Thorsten Ratzka ; Thomas Ott ; Markus Mugrauer ; Fernando Comeron ; Andreas Eckart ; Wolfgang Brandner ;
Date 3 Jun 2002
Subject astro-ph
AffiliationMPE Garching), Eike Guenther (TLS Tautenburg), Joao Alves (ESO Garching), Nicolas Grosso (MPE), Christoph Leinert, Thorsten Ratzka (MPA Heidelberg), Thomas Ott, Markus Mugrauer (MPE), Fernando Comeron (ESO), Andreas Eckart (Univ. Koeln), Wolfgang Brand
AbstractWe obtained deep H- and K-band images of DENIS-P J104814-395606 using SofI and the speckle camera SHARP-I at the ESO-3.5m-NTT as well as QUIRC at the Mauna Kea 2.2m telescope between December 2000 and June 2001. The target was recently discovered as nearby M9-dwarf among DENIS sources (Delfosse et al. 2001). We detect parallactic motion on our images and determine the distance to be 4.6 pm 0.3 pc, more precise than previously known. From the available colors, the distance, and the spectral type, we conclude from theoretical models that the star has a mass of ~0.075 to 0.09 M_sun and an age of ~1 to 2 Gyrs. We also obtained H- and K-band spectra of this star with ISAAC at the VLT. A faint companion candidate is detected 6 arc sec NNW of the star, which is 6.4 pm 0.5 mag fainter in H. However, according to another image taken several month later, the companion candidate is not co-moving with the M9-dwarf. Instead, it is a non-moving background object. Limits for undetected companion candidates are such that we can exclude any stellar companions outside of ~0.25 arc sec (1 AU), any brown dwarf companions (above the deuterium burning mass limit) outside of ~2 arc sec (9 AU), and also any companion down to ~40 M_jup with ge 0.15 arc sec (0.7 AU) separation, all calculated for an age of 2 Gyrs. Our observations show that direct imaging of sub-stellar companions near the deuterium burning mass limit in orbit around nearby ultra-cool dwarfs is possible, even with separations that are smaller than the semi-major axis of the outermost planet in our solar system, namely a few tens of AU.
Source arXiv, astro-ph/0206022
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