Planets Around Low-Mass Stars (PALMS). V. Age-Dating Low-Mass Companions to Members and Interlopers of Young Moving Groups
Brendan P. Bowler, Evgenya L. Shkolnik, Michael C. Liu, Joshua E., Schlieder, Andrew W. Mann, Trent J. Dupuy, Sasha Hinkley, Justin R. Crepp,, John Asher Johnson, Andrew W. Howard, Laura Flagg, Alycia J. Weinberger,, Kimberly M. Aller, Katelyn N. Allers, William M. J. Best

TL;DR
This study uses optical and near-infrared imaging and spectroscopy to identify and characterize young low-mass companions to stars, distinguishing true young members of moving groups from older interlopers, and confirming their substellar nature.
Contribution
It provides new age-dating methods for low-mass companions and identifies several young, low-mass systems, including a new substellar companion and a young brown dwarf, refining the understanding of young moving group memberships.
Findings
Discovery of a new M7 substellar companion with signs of youth.
Identification of a young quadruple system in a compact configuration.
Confirmation of the substellar nature of a brown dwarf in the Pleiades.
Abstract
We present optical and near-infrared adaptive optics (AO) imaging and spectroscopy of 13 ultracool (>M6) companions to late-type stars (K7-M4.5), most of which have recently been identified as candidate members of nearby young moving groups (YMGs; 8-120 Myr) in the literature. The inferred masses of the companions (~10-100 Mjup) are highly sensitive to the ages of the primary stars so we critically examine the kinematic and spectroscopic properties of each system to distinguish bona fide YMG members from old field interlopers. 2MASS J02155892-0929121 C is a new M7 substellar companion (40-60 Mjup) with clear spectroscopic signs of low gravity and hence youth. The primary, possibly a member of the ~40 Myr Tuc-Hor moving group, is visually resolved into three components, making it a young low-mass quadruple system in a compact (<100 AU) configuration. In addition, Li 1 6708…
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