WISE2150-7520AB: A very low mass, wide co-moving brown dwarf system discovered through the citizen science project Backyard Worlds: Planet 9
Jacqueline K. Faherty, Sam Goodman, Dan Caselden, Guillaume Colin,, Marc J. Kuchner, Aaron M. Meisner, Jonathan Gagne', Adam C. Schneider, Eileen, C. Gonzales, Daniella C. Bardalez Gagliuffi, Sarah E. Logsdon, Katelyn, Allers, Adam J. Burgasser

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a very low mass, wide-separation co-moving brown dwarf system WISE2150-7520AB through citizen science, providing insights into such systems' properties and rarity.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed characterization of a very low mass, wide-separation brown dwarf binary system discovered via citizen science, expanding knowledge of such systems in the field.
Findings
The system consists of an L1 primary and T8 secondary at ~341 AU separation.
Both components show no peculiar spectral signatures, indicating field age.
The system has the lowest binding energy among similar low-mass pairs not in clusters.
Abstract
We report the discovery of WISE2150-7520AB (W2150AB): a widely separated (~ 341 AU) very low mass L1 + T8 co-moving system. The system consists of the previously known L1 primary 2MASS J21501592-7520367 and a newly discovered T8 secondary found at position 21:50:18.99 -75:20:54.6 (MJD=57947) using Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) data via the Backyard Worlds: Planet 9 citizen science project. We present Spitzer ch1 and ch2 photometry (ch1-ch2= 1.41 +/-0.04 mag) of the secondary and FIRE prism spectra of both components. The sources show no peculiar spectral or photometric signatures indicating that each component is likely field age. Using all observed data and the Gaia DR2 parallax of 41.3593 +/- 0.2799 mas for W2150A we deduce fundamental parameters of log(Lbol/Lsun)=-3.69 +/- 0.01, Teff=2118 +/- 62 K, and an estimated mass=72 +/- 12 MJup for the L1 and log(Lbol/Lsun)=-5.64…
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