Discovery of a Substellar Companion to the Nearby Debris Disk Host HR 2562
Quinn M. Konopacky, Julien Rameau, Gaspard Duchene, Joseph C., Filippazzo, Paige A. Giorla Godfrey, Christian Marois, Eric L. Nielsen,, Laurent Pueyo, Roman R. Rafikov, Emily L. Rice, Jason J. Wang, S. Mark, Ammons, Vanessa P. Bailey, Travis S. Barman, Joanna Bulger, Sebastian

TL;DR
We discovered a brown dwarf companion to the star HR 2562 within its debris disk, providing insights into substellar object formation and disk dynamics through high-precision imaging and spectral analysis.
Contribution
This is the first detection of a brown dwarf in the inner hole of a debris disk, combining astrometric, spectral, and disk data to characterize its properties and potential formation mechanisms.
Findings
Confirmed common proper motion of the companion with the star
Spectral type of L7±3 assigned to the companion
Estimated mass of 30±15 Jupiter masses
Abstract
We present the discovery of a brown dwarf companion to the debris disk host star HR 2562. This object, discovered with the Gemini Planet Imager (GPI), has a projected separation of 20.30.3 au (0.6180.004") from the star. With the high astrometric precision afforded by GPI, we have confirmed common proper motion of HR 2562B with the star with only a month time baseline between observations to more than . Spectral data in , , and bands show morphological similarity to L/T transition objects. We assign a spectral type of L73 to HR 2562B, and derive a luminosity of (L/L)=-4.620.12, corresponding to a mass of 3015 M from evolutionary models at an estimated age of the system of 300-900 Myr. Although the uncertainty in the age of the host star is significant, the spectra and photometry exhibit several…
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