Primeval very low-mass stars and brown dwarfs -- VII. The discovery of the first wide M + L extreme subdwarf binary

Abstract

I present the discovery of the first wide M + L extreme subdwarf binary system Gaia J0452-36AB. The binary is located at a distance of 137.27+0.68-0.67 pc with a projected separation of 1582878 au. I classified Gaia J0452-36AB as esdM1 and esdL0 subdwarfs, respectively. Gaia J0452-36AB have typical halo kinematics, metallicity of [Fe/H] ≈ -1.4, and temperature of 3550 and 2600 K, respectively. Gaia J0452-36AB is a pair of very low-mass stars with masses of 0.151+0.029-0.019 and 0.0855+0.0014-0.0010 M, and is a gravitationally bound system. I tested the metallicity consistency of existing M subdwarf classification schemes with Gaia J0452-36AB and a sample of M and L subdwarfs with known metallicity. I found that the metallicity of each M subclass defined by the the metallicity index ζ CaH/TiO is not consistent from mid to late M subtypes. Because late-type M and L subdwarfs have dusty atmospheres and high surface gravity which have significant impacts on CaH and TiO indices that used in the classification. The metallicity scale of late-type M subdwarfs would be overestimated by the ζ CaH/TiO index. I discussed the mass range of M subdwarfs, and explained the lack of late-type M extreme and ultra subdwarfs, and decreasing binary fraction from sdM, to esdM, and usdM subclasses. The four M subclasses have different mass ranges. The comparison between M subclasses is between populations in different mass ranges. I also present the discovery of Ruiz 440-469B, an M8 dwarf wide companion to a cool DA white dwarf, Ruiz 440-469.

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