Discovery of a Planetary-Mass Brown Dwarf with a Circumstellar Disk

Luhman, K. L.; Fazio, G. G.; Megeath, S. T.; Hartmann, Lee; Calvet, Nuria; D'Alessio, Paola; Adame, Lucía

United States, Mexico

Abstract

Using the Hubble Space Telescope, the 4 m Blanco Telescope at the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory, and the Spitzer Space Telescope, we have performed deep imaging from 0.8 to 8 μm of the southern subcluster in the Chamaeleon I star-forming region. In these data, we have discovered an object, Cha 110913-773444, whose colors and magnitudes are indicative of a very low mass brown dwarf with a circumstellar disk. In a near-infrared spectrum of this source obtained with the Gemini Near-Infrared Spectrograph, the presence of strong steam absorption confirms its late-type nature (>~M9.5) while the shapes of the H- and K-band continua and the strengths of the Na I and K I lines demonstrate that it is a young, pre-main-sequence object rather than a field dwarf. A comparison of the bolometric luminosity of Cha 110913-773444 to the luminosities predicted by the evolutionary models of Chabrier & Baraffe and Burrows and coworkers indicates a mass of 8+7-3MJ, placing it fully within the mass range observed for extrasolar planetary companions (M<~15MJ). The spectral energy distribution of this object exhibits mid-infrared excess emission at λ>5 μm, which we have successfully modeled in terms of an irradiated viscous accretion disk with M˙<~10-12 Msolar yr-1. Cha 110913-773444 is now the least massive brown dwarf observed to have a circumstellar disk, and indeed is one of the least massive free-floating objects found to date. These results demonstrate that the raw materials for planet formation exist around free-floating planetary-mass bodies.

2005 The Astrophysical Journal
eHST 87