SIMP J013656.5+093347 is Likely a Planetary-Mass Object in the Carina-Near Moving Group

Abstract

We report the discovery that the nearby ( 6 pc) photometrically variable T2.5 dwarf SIMP~J013656.5+093347 is a likely member of the 200 Myr-old Carina-Near moving group with a probability of > 99.9% based on its full kinematics. Our v i measurement of 50.9 0.8 km s-1 combined with the known rotation period inferred from variability measurements provide a lower limit of 1.01 0.02 RJup on the radius of SIMP0136+0933, an independent verification that it must be younger than 950 Myr according to evolution models. We estimate a field interloper probability of 0.2% based on the density of field T0-T5 dwarfs. At the age of Carina-Near, SIMP0136+0933 has an estimated mass of 12.7 1.0 MJup and is predicted to have burned roughly half of its original deuterium. SIMP0136+0933 is the closest known young moving group member to the Sun, and is one of only a few known young T dwarfs, making it an important benchmark for understanding the atmospheres of young planetary-mass objects.

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