Two Extraordinary Substellar Binaries at the T/Y Transition and the Y-Band Fluxes of the Coolest Brown Dwarfs
Michael C. Liu (IfA/Hawaii), Trent J. Dupuy (CfA/SAO), Brendan P., Bowler (IfA/Hawaii), S. K. Leggett (Gemini), William M. J. Best (IfA/Hawaii)

TL;DR
This study discovers and characterizes two exceptional substellar binaries at the T/Y transition, revealing significant color and flux changes that inform the understanding of ultracool dwarf atmospheres and the T/Y spectral boundary.
Contribution
It reports the discovery of the coldest known substellar binaries with wide separations and unusual flux ratios, and links color changes to temperature transitions in ultracool dwarfs.
Findings
Y-J color drops sharply between late T and Y dwarfs
The T/Y transition coincides with a significant change in 1 micron fluxes
Far-red data may aid classification of objects below 500 K
Abstract
Using Keck laser guide star adaptive optics imaging, we have found that the T9 dwarf WISE J1217+1626 and T8 dwarf WISE J1711+3500 are exceptional binaries, with unusually wide separations (~0.8 arcsec, 8-15 AU), large near-IR flux ratios (~2-3 mags), and small mass ratios (~0.5) compared to previously known field ultracool binaries. Keck/NIRSPEC H-band spectra give a spectral type of Y0 for WISE J1217+1626B, and photometric estimates suggest T9.5 for WISE J1711+3500B. The WISE J1217+1626AB system is very similar to the T9+Y0 binary CFBDSIR J1458+1013AB; these two systems are the coldest known substellar multiples, having secondary components of ~400 K and being planetary-mass binaries if their ages are <~1 Gyr. Both WISE J1217+1626B and CFBDSIR J1458+1013B have strikingly blue Y-J colors compared to previously known T dwarfs, including their T9 primaries. Combining all available data,…
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