Discovery of a Wide Binary Brown Dwarf Born in Isolation
K. L. Luhman, E. E. Mamajek, P. R. Allen, A. A. Muench, D. P., Finkbeiner

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a wide binary brown dwarf system in isolation within the Taurus star-forming region, providing evidence for brown dwarf formation outside of stellar clusters.
Contribution
It presents the first spectroscopically confirmed isolated brown dwarf binary, challenging the notion that brown dwarfs require dense environments for formation.
Findings
Both objects are young (~1 Myr) with spectral types M7.25 and M9.25.
The system's wide separation suggests formation in isolation.
FU Tau A is overluminous, possibly an unresolved binary.
Abstract
During a survey for stars with disks in the Taurus star-forming region using the Spitzer Space Telescope, we have discovered a pair of young brown dwarfs, FU Tau A and B, in the Barnard 215 dark cloud. They have a projected angular separation of 5.7", corresponding to 800 AU at the distance of Taurus. To assess the nature of these two objects, we have obtained spectra of them and have constructed their spectral energy distributions. Both sources are young (~1 Myr) according to their Halpha emission, gravity-sensitive spectral features, and mid-IR excess emission. The proper motion of FU Tau A provides additional evidence of its membership in Taurus. We measure spectral types of M7.25 and M9.25 for FU Tau A and B, respectively, which correspond to masses of ~0.05 and ~0.015 M\cdot according to the evolutionary models of Chabrier and Baraffe. FU Tau A is significantly overluminous…
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