The very nearby M/T dwarf binary SCR 1845-6357
Markus Kasper (ESO), Beth A. Biller (Steward Observatory), Adam, Burrows (Steward Observatory), Wolfgang Brandner (MPIA), Jano Budaj (Steward, Observatory), Laird M. Close (Steward Observatory)

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and detailed characterization of SCR 1845-6357, the first late M/T dwarf binary, highlighting its potential for precise mass measurement and its significance as a T-dwarf calibrator.
Contribution
It provides spatially resolved imaging and spectra of the first late M/T dwarf binary, enabling accurate spectral typing and physical parameter estimation, and demonstrates its suitability for mass-luminosity calibration.
Findings
SCR 1845B is a T6 brown dwarf.
Effective temperature of SCR 1845B is about 950K.
Mass of SCR 1845B is 40-50 Jupiter masses.
Abstract
The recently discovered star SCR 1845-6357 is the first late M/T dwarf binary discovered. SCR 1845 is a particular object due to its tight orbit (currently around 4 AU) and its proximity to the Sun (3.85 pc). We present spatially resolved VLT/NACO images and low resolution spectra of SCR 1845 in the J, H and K near-infrared bands. Since the T dwarf companion, SCR 1845B, is so close to the primary SCR 1845A, orbital motion is evident even within a year. Following the orbital motion, the binary's mass can be measured accurately within a decade, making SCR 1845B a key T-dwarf mass-luminosity calibrator. The NIR spectra allow for accurate determination of spectral type and also for rough estimates of the object's physical parameters. The spectral type of SCR 1845B is determined by direct comparison of the flux calibrated JHK spectra with T dwarf standard template spectra and also by NIR…
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