An irradiated brown-dwarf companion to an accreting white dwarf
Juan V. Hern\'andez Santisteban, Christian Knigge, Stuart P., Littlefair, Rene P. Breton, Vikram S. Dhillon, Boris T. G\"ansicke, Thomas R., Marsh, Magaretha L. Pretorius, John Southworth, Peter H. Hauschildt

TL;DR
This study presents the first direct spectroscopic detection and characterization of an irradiated brown-dwarf companion in an accreting white dwarf binary, providing new insights into its physical properties and atmospheric behavior under intense irradiation.
Contribution
It reports the first direct spectroscopic detection and detailed characterization of an irradiated sub-stellar donor in an accreting white dwarf system, including mass, spectral type, and temperature differences.
Findings
Mass of donor: 0.055±0.008 M_sun
Spectral type: L1±1
Temperature difference between day and night sides: ~57 K
Abstract
Brown dwarfs and giant planets orbiting close to a host star are subjected to significant irradiation that can modify the properties of their atmospheres. In order to test the atmospheric models that are used to describe these systems, it is necessary to obtain accurate observational estimates of their physical properties (masses, radii, temperatures, albedos). Interacting compact binary systems provide a natural laboratory for studying strongly irradiated sub-stellar objects. As the mass-losing secondary in these systems makes a critical, but poorly understood transition from the stellar to the sub-stellar regime, it is also strongly irradiated by the compact accretor. In fact, the internal and external energy fluxes are both expected to be comparable in these objects, providing access to an unexplored irradiation regime. However, the atmospheric properties of such donors have so far…
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