Near-Infrared Spectroscopy of 2M0441+2301 AabBab: A Quadruple System Spanning the Stellar to Planetary Mass Regimes
Brendan Bowler, Lynne Hillenbrand

TL;DR
This study reports the discovery and detailed characterization of a young, hierarchical quadruple system spanning stellar to planetary masses, providing insights into its formation and orbital dynamics.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed analysis of a quadruple system with components from stellar to planetary masses, supporting a cloud fragmentation formation scenario.
Findings
The system is the lowest-mass quadruple known.
Orbital motion observed in both pairs, with long orbital periods.
Component masses range from stellar to planetary mass.
Abstract
We present Keck/NIRC2 and OSIRIS near-infrared imaging and spectroscopy of 2M0441+2301 AabBab, a young (1--3 Myr) hierarchical quadruple system comprising a low-mass star, two brown dwarfs, and a planetary-mass companion in Taurus. All four components show spectroscopic signs of low surface gravity, and both 2M0441+2301 Aa and Ab possess Pa emission indicating they each harbor accretion subdisks. Astrometry spanning 2008--2014 reveals orbital motion in both the Aab (0.23" separation) and Bab (0.095" separation) pairs, although the implied orbital periods of 300 years means dynamical masses will not be possible in the near future. The faintest component (2M0441+2301 Bb) has an angular -band shape, strong molecular absorption (VO, CO, HO, and FeH), and shallow alkali lines, confirming its young age, late spectral type (L1 1), and low temperature (1800~K).…
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