TOI-5375 B: A Very Low Mass Star at the Hydrogen-burning Limit Orbiting an Early M-type Star

Kobulnicky, Henry A.; Cochran, William D.; Mahadevan, Suvrath; Everett, Mark E.; Monson, Andrew; Cañas, Caleb I.; Kanodia, Shubham; Ninan, Joe P.; Bender, Chad F.; Hearty, Fred; Robertson, Paul; Schwab, Christian; Terrien, Ryan C.; Libby-Roberts, Jessica E.; Lin, Andrea S. J.; Stefánsson, Gudmundur; Gupta, Arvind F.; Parker, Brock A.; Lambert, Mika

United States, Switzerland, India, Australia

Abstract

The Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) mission detected a companion orbiting TIC 71268730, categorized it as a planet candidate, and designated the system TOI-5375. Our follow-up analysis using radial-velocity data from the Habitable-zone Planet Finder, photometric data from Red Buttes Observatory, and speckle imaging with NN-EXPLORE Exoplanet Stellar Speckle Imager determined that the companion is a very low mass star near the hydrogen-burning mass limit with a mass of 0.080 ± 0.002M (83.81 ± 2.10M J ), a radius of ${0.1114}_{-0.0050}^{+0.0048}{R}_{\odot }$ (1.0841 ${}_{0.0487}^{0.0467}{R}_{J}$ ), and brightness temperature of 2600 ± 70 K. This object orbits with a period of 1.721553 ± 0.000001 days around an early M dwarf star (0.62 ± 0.016M ). TESS photometry shows regular variations in the host star's TESS light curve, which we interpreted as an activity-induced variation of ~2%, and used this variability to measure the host star's stellar rotation period of ${1.9716}_{-0.0083}^{+0.0080}$ days. The TOI-5375 system provides tight constraints on stellar models of low-mass stars at the hydrogen-burning limit and adds to the population in this important region. *Based on observations obtained with the Hobby-Eberly Telescope (HET), which is a joint project of the University of Texas at Austin, the Pennsylvania State University, Ludwig-Maximillians-Universitaet Muenchen, and Georg-August Universitaet Goettingen. The HET is named in honor of its principal benefactors, William P. Hobby and Robert E. Eberly. †The WIYN Observatory is a joint facility of the NSF's National Optical-Infrared Astronomy Research Laboratory, Indiana University, the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Pennsylvania State University, the University of Missouri, the University of California-Irvine, and Purdue University.

2023 The Astronomical Journal
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