An Oasis in the Brown Dwarf Desert: Confirmation of Two Low-mass Transiting Brown Dwarfs Discovered by TESS
Abstract
As the intermediate-mass siblings of stars and planets, brown dwarfs (BDs) are vital to study for a better understanding of how objects change across the planet-to-star mass range. Here, we report two low-mass transiting BD systems discovered by TESS, TOI-4776 (TIC 196286578) and TOI-5422 (TIC 80611440), located in an under-populated region of the BD mass-period space. These two systems have comparable masses but different ages. The younger and larger BD is TOI-4776b with 32.0+1.9-1.8MJup and 1.018+0.048-0.043RJup, orbiting a late-F star about 5.4+2.8-2.2 Gyr old in a 10.41380.000014 day period. The older TOI-5422b has 27.7+1.4-1.1MJup and 0.815+0.031-0.026RJup in a 5.37720.00001 day orbit around a subgiant star about 8.22.4 Gyr old. Compared with substellar mass-radius (M-R) evolution models, TOI-4776b has an inflated radii. In contrast, TOI-5422b is slightly "underluminous" with respect to model predictions, which is not commonly seen in the BD population. In addition, TOI-5422 shows apparent photometric modulations with a rotation period of 10.750.54 day found by rotation analysis, and the stellar inclination angle is obtained to be I=75.52+9.96-11.79. Therefore, it is likely that TOI-5422b is spinning up the host star and its orbit is aligned with the stellar spin axis.
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