Investigating 2M1155-7919B: a Nearby, Young, Low-Mass Star Actively Accreting from a Nearly Edge-on, Dusty Disk
Abstract
We investigate the nature of an unusually faint member of the ε Cha Association (D100 pc, age 5 Myr), the nearest region of star formation of age <8 Myr. This object, 2MASS J11550336-7919147 (2M1155-79B), is a wide (580 AU) separation, comoving companion to low-mass (M3) ε Cha Association member 2MASS J11550485-7919108 (2M1155-79A). We present near-infrared spectra of both components, along with analysis of photometry from Gaia EDR3, 2MASS, VHS, and WISE. The near-IR spectrum of 2M1155-79B displays strong He I 1.083 emission, a sign of active accretion and/or accretion-driven winds from a circumstellar disk. Analysis of WISE archival data reveals that the mid-infrared excess previously associated with 2M1155-79A instead originates from the disk surrounding 2M1155-79B. Based on these results, as well as radiative transfer modeling of its optical/IR spectral energy distribution, we conclude that 2M1155-79B is most likely a young, late-M, star that is partially obscured by, and actively accreting from, a nearly edge-on circumstellar disk. This would place 2M1155-79B among the rare group of nearby (D100 pc), young (age <10 Myr) mid-M stars that are orbited by and accreting from highly inclined protoplanetary disks. Like these systems, the 2M1155-79B system is a particularly promising subject for studies of star and planet formation around low-mass stars.
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