Planets Around Low-Mass Stars (PALMS). VI. Discovery of a Remarkably Red Planetary-Mass Companion to the AB Dor Moving Group Candidate 2MASS J22362452+4751425
Brendan Bowler, Michael Liu, Dimitri Mawet, Henry Ngo, Lison Malo,, Gregory Mace, Jacob McLane, Jessica Lu, Isaiah Tristan, Sasha Hinkley, Lynne, Hillenbrand, Evgenya Shkolnik, Bjorn Benneke, William Best

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a highly red, planetary-mass companion to a young star, providing insights into atmospheric properties and cloud persistence in substellar objects beyond 100 million years.
Contribution
It presents the discovery and characterization of the reddest known substellar companion, highlighting its unique atmospheric features and implications for planetary atmosphere evolution.
Findings
Companion has a mass of 11-14 Jupiter masses.
It exhibits a very red near-infrared color, redder than known exoplanets.
The object shows thick cloud features similar to younger planetary-mass objects.
Abstract
We report the discovery of an extremely red planetary-mass companion to 2MASS J22362452+4751425, a 0.6 late-K dwarf likely belonging to the 120 Myr AB Doradus moving group. 2M2236+4751 b was identified in multi-epoch NIRC2 adaptive optics imaging at Keck Observatory at a separation of 3.7, or 230 20 AU in projection at the kinematic distance of 63 5 pc to its host star. Assuming membership in the AB Dor group, as suggested from its kinematics, the inferred mass of 2M2236+4751 b is 11-14 . Follow-up Keck/OSIRIS -band spectroscopy of the companion reveals strong CO absorption similar to other faint red L dwarfs and lacks signs of methane absorption despite having an effective temperature of 900-1200 K. With a (-) color of 2.69 0.12 mag, the near-infrared slope of 2M2236+4751 b is redder than…
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