TOI-811b and TOI-852b: New transiting brown dwarfs with similar masses and very different radii and ages from the TESS mission

Abstract

We report the discovery of two transiting brown dwarfs (BDs), TOI-811b and TOI-852b, from NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite mission. These two transiting BDs have similar masses, but very different radii and ages. Their host stars have similar masses, effective temperatures, and metallicities. The younger and larger transiting BD is TOI-811b at a mass of Mb = 55.3 3.2 MJ and radius of Rb = 1.35 0.09 RJ and it orbits its host star in a period of P = 25.16551 0.00004 days. Its age of 93+61-29 Myr, which we derive from an application of gyrochronology to its host star, is why this BD's radius is relatively large, not heating from its host star since this BD orbits at a longer orbital period than most known transiting BDs. This constraint on the youth of TOI-811b allows us to test substellar mass-radius isochrones where the radius of BDs changes rapidly with age. TOI-852b is a much older (4.0 Gyr from stellar isochrone models of the host star) and smaller transiting BD at a mass of Mb = 53.7 1.3 MJ, a radius of Rb = 0.75 0.03 RJ, and an orbital period of P = 4.94561 0.00008 days. TOI-852b joins the likes of other old transiting BDs that trace out the oldest substellar mass-radius isochrones where contraction of the BD's radius asymptotically slows. Both host stars have a mass of M = 1.32 M0.05 and differ in their radii, T eff, and [Fe/H] with TOI-811 having R=1.270.09 R, T eff = 6107 77K, and [Fe/H] = +0.40 0.09 and TOI-852 having R=1.710.04 R, T eff = 5768 84K, and [Fe/H] = +0.33 0.09. We take this opportunity to examine how TOI-811b and TOI-852b serve as test points for young and old substellar isochrones, respectively.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…