The discovery of a very cool binary system
Ben Burningham, S. K. Leggett, P.W. Lucas, D.J. Pinfield, R.L. Smart,, A.C. Day-Jones, H.R.A. Jones, D.Murray, E. Nickson, M. Tamura, Z. Zhang, N., Lodieu, C.G. Tinney, M. R. Zapatero Osorio

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a unique binary system with a very cool T dwarf and a low-metallicity primary, providing insights into substellar object classification and properties.
Contribution
The discovery of a new binary system with peculiar spectral features and extreme infrared colors, offering new data for understanding low-metallicity and high-gravity substellar objects.
Findings
The T dwarf has the bluest near-infrared colors observed for such objects.
The T dwarf exhibits the reddest H-[4.5] color recorded for a substellar object.
Estimated parameters suggest an old, low-metallicity system with a wide separation.
Abstract
We report the discovery of a very cool d/sdL7+T7.5p common proper motion binary system, SDSS J1416+13AB, found by cross-matching the UKIDSS Large Area Survey Data Release 5 against the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 7. The d/sdL7 is blue in J-H and H-K and has other features suggestive of low-metallicity and/or high gravity. The T7.5p displays spectral peculiarity seen before in earlier type dwarfs discovered in UKIDSS LAS DR4, and referred to as CH4-J-early peculiarity. We suggest that CH4-J-early peculiarity arises from low-metallicity and/or high-gravity, and speculate as to its use for classifying T dwarfs. UKIDSS and follow-up UKIRT/WFCAM photometry shows the T dwarf to have the bluest near infrared colours yet seen for such an object with H-K = -1.31+/-0.17. Warm Spitzer IRAC photometry shows the T dwarf to have extremely red H-[4.5] = 4.86+/-0.04, which is the reddest yet…
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