Direct Imaging Discovery of a Young Brown Dwarf Companion to an A2V Star

Abstract

We present the discovery and spectroscopy of HIP 75056Ab, a companion directly imaged at a very small separation of 0.125 arcsec to an A2V star in the Scorpius-Centaurus OB2 association. Our observations utilized VLT/SPHERE between 2015-2019, enabling low-resolution spectroscopy (0.95-1.65 μ m), dual-band imaging (2.1-2.25 μ m), and relative astrometry over a four-year baseline. HIP 75056Ab is consistent with spectral types in the range of M6-L2 and T eff 2000-2600 K. A comparison of the companion's brightness to evolutionary tracks suggests a mass of 20-30 MJup. The astrometric measurements are consistent with an orbital semi-major axis of 15-45 au and an inclination close to face-on (i35o). In this range of mass and orbital separation, HIP 75056Ab is likely at the low-mass end of the distribution of companions formed via disk instability, although a formation of the companion via core accretion cannot be excluded. The orbital constraints are consistent with the modest eccentricity values predicted by disk instability, a scenario that can be confirmed by further astrometric monitoring. HIP 75056Ab may be utilized as a low-mass atmospheric comparison to older, higher-mass brown dwarfs, and also to young giant planets. Finally, the detection of HIP 75056Ab at 0.125 arcsec represents a milestone in detecting low-mass companions at separations corresponding to the habitable zones of nearby Sun-like stars.

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