Circumstellar Environment and Effective Temperature of the Young Substellar Eclipsing Binary 2MASS J05352184-0546085
Subhanjoy Mohanty, Keivan G. Stassun, Robert D. Mathieu

TL;DR
This study uses infrared and optical photometry to investigate the circumstellar environment and effective temperatures of a young brown dwarf binary, finding no evidence of significant disks and supporting magnetic activity as a cause for temperature inversion.
Contribution
It provides new observational constraints on disk presence and magnetic effects in young brown dwarfs, informing models of their fundamental properties and evolution.
Findings
No excess disk emission detected around the binary
Supports magnetic activity causing temperature inversion
Constraints on the components' effective temperatures
Abstract
We present new Spitzer IRAC/PU/MIPS photometry from 3.6 to 24 um, and new Gemini GMOS photometry at 0.48 um, of the young brown dwarf eclipsing binary 2MASS J05352184-0546085, located in the Orion Nebula Cluster. No excess disk emission is detected: The measured fluxes at lambda < 8 um are within 1 sigma (< 0.1 mJy) of a bare photosphere, and the 3 sigma upper limit at 16 um is a mere 0.04 mJy above the bare photospheric level. Together with the known properties of the system, this implies the absence of optically thick disks around the individual components. It also implies that if any circumbinary disk is present, it must either be optically thin and extremely tenuous (10^{-10} Msun) if it extends in to within ~0.1 AU of the binary (the approximate tidal truncation radius), or it must be optically thick with a large inner hole, > 0.6-10 AU in radius depending on degree of flaring. The…
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