CFBDSIR J1458+1013B: A Very Cold (>T10) Brown Dwarf in a Binary System
Michael C. Liu, Philippe Delorme, Trent J. Dupuy, Brendan P. Bowler,, Loic Albert, Etienne Artigau, Celine Reyle, Thierry Forveille, Xavier, Delfosse

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and characterization of CFBDS J1458+1013B, the coldest known brown dwarf in a binary system, providing new insights into ultra-cool substellar objects and their atmospheric properties.
Contribution
It presents the identification and detailed analysis of a very cold (>T10) brown dwarf binary, establishing a new benchmark for studying ultra-cool atmospheres and low-mass objects.
Findings
CFBDS J1458+1013B is the coldest brown dwarf binary discovered to date.
Its secondary component has an extremely low luminosity (~2 x 10^{-7} L_sun).
The object is a promising candidate for the hypothesized Y spectral class.
Abstract
We have identified CFBDS J1458+10 as a 0.11" (2.6 AU) physical binary using Keck laser guide star adaptive optics imaging and have measured a distance of 23.1+/-2.4 pc to the system based on near-IR parallax data from CFHT. The integrated-light near-IR spectrum indicates a spectral type of T9.5, and model atmospheres suggest a slightly higher temperature and surface gravity than the T10 dwarf UGPS J0722-05. Thus, CFBDS J1458+10AB is the coolest brown dwarf binary found to date. Its secondary component has an absolute H-band magnitude that is 1.9+/-0.3 mag fainter than UGPS J0722-05, giving an inferred spectral type of >T10. The secondary's bolometric luminosity of ~2 x 10^{-7} L_sun makes it the least luminous known brown dwarf by a factor of 4-5. By comparing to evolutionary models and T9-T10 objects, we estimate a temperature of 370+/-40 K and a mass of 6-15 Mjup for CFBDS J1458+10B.…
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