Deep search for companions to probable young brown dwarfs
G. Chauvin, J. Faherty, A. Boccaletti, K. Cruz, A.-M. Lagrange, B., Zuckerman, M. S. Bessell, J.-L. Beuzit, M. Bonnefoy, C. Dumas, P. Lowrance,, D. Mouillet, I. Song

TL;DR
This study used high contrast imaging to search for planetary-mass companions around four young brown dwarfs, discovering a binary system and setting constraints on potential companions.
Contribution
First high contrast adaptive optics imaging survey targeting probable young brown dwarfs to detect planetary-mass companions and characterize binary properties.
Findings
No companions detected around three objects within 250 AU.
Resolved a binary system with a 5-6 AU separation and high mass ratio.
Confirmed physical binding and orbital motion of the binary system.
Abstract
We have obtained high contrast images of four nearby, faint, and very low mass objects 2MASSJ04351455-1414468, SDSSJ044337.61+000205.1, 2MASSJ06085283-2753583 and 2MASSJ06524851-5741376 (here after 2MASS0435-14, SDSS0443+00, 2MASS0608-27 and 2MASS0652-57), identified in the field as probable isolated young brown dwarfs. Our goal was to search for binary companions down to the planetary mass regime. We used the NAOS-CONICA adaptive optics instrument (NACO) and its unique capability to sense the wavefront in the near-infrared to acquire sharp images of the four systems in Ks, with a field of view of 28"*28". Additional J and L' imaging and follow-up observations at a second epoch were obtained for 2MASS0652-57. With a typical contrast DKs= 4.0-7.0 mag, our observations are sensitive down to the planetary mass regime considering a minimum age of 10 to 120 Myr for these systems. No…
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