The discovery of an M4+T8.5 binary system
Ben Burningham, D.J.Pinfield, S.K.Leggett, C.G.Tinney, M.C.Liu, D., Homeier, A.A. West, A. Day-Jones, N.Huelamo, T.J.Dupuy, Z.Zhang, D.N.Murray,, N. Lodieu, D. Barrado y Navascues, S. Folkes, M.C.Galvez-Ortiz, H.R.A. Jones,, P. W. Lucas, M. Morales Calderon, M. Tamura

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a T8.5 dwarf companion to an M4 star, Wolf 940, and provides the first empirical determination of its physical properties, including temperature and gravity, without relying on spectral model fitting.
Contribution
It presents the first empirical determination of a T8+ dwarf's properties using system age constraints and evolutionary models, avoiding spectral model fitting biases.
Findings
Wolf 940B has Teff = 570 +/- 25K and log g = 4.75-5.00.
The system is at least 3.5 Gyr old, up to 6 Gyr.
Spectral ratios may overestimate Teff by ~100K.
Abstract
We report the discovery of a T8.5 dwarf, which is a companion to the M4 dwarf Wolf 940. At a distance of 12.50 (+0.75,-0.67) pc, the angular separation of 32arcsec corresponds to a projected separation of 400 AU. The M4 primary displays no Halpha emission, and we apply the age-activity relations of West et al. to place a lower limit on the age of the system of 3.5 Gyr. Weak Halpha absorption suggests some residual activity and we estimate an upper age limit of 6 Gyr. We apply the relations of Bonfils et al for V-Ks and M_Ks to determine the metallicity, [Fe/H] = -0.06 +/- 0.20 for Wolf~940A, and by extension the T8.5 secondary, Wolf 940B. We have obtained JHK NIRI spectroscopy and JHKL' photometry of Wolf 940B, and use these data, in combination with theoretical extensions, to determine its bolometric flux, Fbol = 1.75 +/- 0.18 E-16 Wm^-2 and thus its luminosity log(L*/Lsun) = -6.07 +/-…
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