A new take on the low-mass brown dwarf companions on wide-orbits in Upper-Scorpius
Simon Petrus, Micka\"el Bonnefoy, Ga\"el Chauvin, Carine Babusiaux,, Philippe Delorme, Anne-Marie Lagrange, Nathan Florent, Amelia Bayo, Markus, Janson, Beth Biller, Elena Manjavacas, Gabriel-Dominique Marleau, Taisiya G., Kopytova

TL;DR
This study characterizes the physical and chemical properties of low-mass brown-dwarf companions in Upper-Scorpius using multi-wavelength spectroscopy, revealing insights into their formation, activity, and potential multiplicity.
Contribution
It provides detailed spectroscopic analysis of young brown-dwarfs and their analogues, applying Bayesian modeling to infer physical parameters and exploring accretion and activity signatures.
Findings
Spectroscopic parameters align with evolutionary models.
Detection of chromospheric activity in several objects.
Evidence of over-luminosity possibly due to activity or multiplicity.
Abstract
The Upper-Scorpius association (5-11 Myr) contains a unique population of low-mass (M<30 MJup) brown-dwarfs. The detailed relative characterization of their physical properties (mass, radius, temperature, composition, ongoing accretion) offers the opportunity to potentially explore their origin and their mechanisms of formation. We aim at characterizing the chemical and physical properties of three young, late-M brown-dwarfs claimed to be companions of the Upper-Scorpius stars USco161031.9-16191305, HIP77900, and HIP78530 using medium resolution spectroscopy at UV (R~3300), optical (R~5400), and near-infrared (R~4300) wavelengths. The spectra of six free-floating analogues from the same association are analyzed for comparison and to explore the potential physical differences between these substellar objects. We also aim at analyzing emission lines at UV and optical wavelengths to…
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