The Discovery of a Field Methane Dwarf from Sloan Digital Sky Survey Commissioning Data
Abstract
We report the discovery of the coolest field dwarf yet known, selected as a stellar object with extremely red colors from commissioning imaging data of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. Its spectrum from 0.8 to 2.5 microns is dominated by strong bands of H2 O and CH4. Its spectrum and colors over this range are very similar to those of Gliese 229B, the only other known example of a methane dwarf. It is roughly 1.2 mag fainter than Gliese 229B, implying that it lies at a distance of roughly 10 pc. Such a cool object must have a mass well below the hydrogen-burning limit of 0.08 solar masses, and therefore is a genuine brown dwarf, with a probable mass in the range 0.015-0.06 solar masses for an age range of 0.3-5 Gyr.
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