Discovery of a Nearby Young Brown Dwarf Disk

Abstract

We report the discovery of the youngest brown dwarf with a disk at 102 pc from the Sun, WISEA~J120037.79-784508.3 (W1200-7845), via the Disk Detective citizen science project. We establish that W1200-7845 is located in the 3.7+4.6 \\ -1.4 Myr-old ~Cha association. Its spectral energy distribution (SED) exhibits clear evidence of an infrared (IR) excess, indicative of the presence of a warm circumstellar disk. Modeling this warm disk, we find the data are best fit using a power-law description with a slope α = -0.94, which suggests it is a young, Class II type disk. Using a single blackbody disk fit, we find Teff, disk = 521 K and LIR/L* = 0.14. The near-infrared spectrum of W1200-7845 matches a spectral type of M6.0γ 0.5, which corresponds to a low surface gravity object, and lacks distinctive signatures of strong Paβ or Brγ accretion. Both our SED fitting and spectral analysis indicate the source is cool (Teff = 2784-2850 K), with a mass of 42-58 MJup, well within the brown dwarf regime. The proximity of this young brown dwarf disk makes the system an ideal benchmark for investigating the formation and early evolution of brown dwarfs.

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