The enigmatic young brown dwarf binary FU Tau: accretion and activity
B. Stelzer, A. Scholz, C. Argiroffi, G. Micela

TL;DR
This study investigates the unique X-ray emission and accretion activity of the young brown dwarf binary FU Tau, revealing unusual soft X-ray components and suggesting non-contemporaneous formation and extreme youth as possible causes.
Contribution
It provides the first resolved X-ray observations of FU Tau, identifies a soft X-ray component linked to accretion, and discusses implications for brown dwarf formation and magnetic activity.
Findings
Detection of soft X-ray component similar to T Tauri stars
FU Tau A is overluminous and shows signs of strong accretion
High X-ray luminosity correlates with high bolometric luminosity
Abstract
FU Tau belongs to a rare class of young, wide brown dwarf binaries. We have resolved the system in a Chandra X-ray observation and detected only the primary, FU Tau A. Hard X-ray emission, presumably from a corona, is present but, unexpectedly, we detect also a strong and unusually soft component from FU Tau A. Its X-ray properties, so far unique among brown dwarfs, are very similar to those of the T Tauri star TW Hya. The analogy with TW Hya suggests that the dominating soft X-ray component can be explained by emission from accretion shocks. However, the typical free-fall velocities of a brown dwarf are too low for an interpretation of the observed X-ray temperature as post-shock region. On the other hand, velocities in excess of the free-fall speed are derived from archival optical spectroscopy, and independent pieces of evidence for strong accretion in FU Tau A are found in optical…
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