CWISE J105512.11+544328.3: A Nearby Y Dwarf Spectroscopically Confirmed with Keck/NIRES

Meisner, Aaron M.; Cushing, Michael C.; Kirkpatrick, J. Davy; Burgasser, Adam J.; Schneider, Adam C.; Marocco, Federico; Faherty, Jacqueline K.; Caselden, Dan; Kuchner, Marc J.; Gagné, Jonathan; Gerasimov, Roman; Moranta, Leslie; Hsu, Chih-Chun; Casewell, Sarah; Robbins, Grady; Alejandro, Sherelyn; Backyard Worlds: Cool Neighbors Collaboration

United States, Canada, United Kingdom

Abstract

Y dwarfs, the coolest known spectral class of brown dwarfs, overlap in mass and temperature with giant exoplanets, providing unique laboratories for studying low-temperature atmospheres. However, only a fraction of Y dwarf candidates have been spectroscopically confirmed. We present Keck/NIRES near-infrared spectroscopy of the nearby (d ≈ 6-8 pc) brown dwarf CWISE J105512.11+544328.3. Although its near-infrared spectrum aligns best with the Y0 standard in the J band, no standard matches well across the full YJHK wavelength range. The CWISE J105512.11+544328.3 NH3-H = 0.427 ± 0.0012 and CH4-J = 0.0385 ± 0.0007 absorption indices and absolute Spitzer [4.5] magnitude of 15.18 ± 0.22 are also indicative of an early-Y dwarf rather than a late-T dwarf. CWISE J105512.11+544328.3 additionally exhibits the bluest Spitzer [3.6]-[4.5] color among all spectroscopically confirmed Y dwarfs. Despite this anomalously blue Spitzer color given its low luminosity, CWISE J105512.11+544328.3 does not show other clear kinematic or spectral indications of low metallicity. Atmospheric model comparisons yield a log(g) ≤ 4.5 and T eff ≈ 500 ± 150 K for this source. We classify CWISE J105512.11+544328.3 as a Y0 (pec) dwarf, adding to the remarkable diversity of the Y-type population. JWST spectroscopy would be crucial to understanding the origin of this Y dwarf's unusual preference for low-gravity models and blue 3-5 μm color.

2023 The Astrophysical Journal
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