TOI-2155 b: A Massive Brown Dwarf or a Very Low-Mass Star?

Abstract

We present TOI-2155\,b, a massive transiting companion, discovered using data from NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) mission and confirmed with ground-based RV measurements from the Tillinghast Reflector Echelle Spectrograph (TRES). We also analyze ground-based follow-up photometric data from the Wendelstein Observatory (WST), Las Cumbres Observatory Global Telescope (LCOGT), and Wild Boar Remote Observatory (WBR). TOI-2155\,b is a short-period companion with P= 3.7246950 0.0000014~days. The radius and mass of TOI-2155\,b are found to be Rb = 0.972+0.009-0.008 \,RJ and Mb = 80.6+1.0-1.1 \,MJ, respectively, corresponding to a density of ρb= 109+3.1-3.3 g cm-3. The F-type subgiant host star has an effective temperature of T eff = 6085 78 K, a radius R = 1.705+0.066-0.064 R and a mass M = 1.33 0.008~M. With a mass close to the hydrogen-burning minimum mass, TOI-2155\,b lies at the boundary between brown dwarfs and low-mass stars. Its measured mass, radius, and density place it in a transitional region, where distinguishing between a massive brown dwarf and a very low-mass star is not straightforward. TOI-2155\,b therefore provides a valuable benchmark for testing evolutionary models of stellar and substellar structure near the hydrogen-burning limit.

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