CS Cha B: A disc-obscured M-type star mimicking a polarised planetary companion
S. Y. Haffert, R. G. van Holstein, C. Ginski, J. Brinchmann, I. A. G., Snellen, J. Milli, T. Stolker, C. U. Keller, and J. Girard

TL;DR
This study reveals that CS Cha B, previously thought to be a planetary companion, is actually a mid-M-type star obscured by a disc, emphasizing the importance of broad spectral observations for accurate classification.
Contribution
The paper provides the first spectrum of CS Cha B and demonstrates its true nature as a disc-obscured star rather than a planetary-mass object, challenging previous classifications.
Findings
CS Cha B shows accretion and outflow signatures.
The companion is likely a mid-M-type star.
It is obscured by a highly inclined disc.
Abstract
Context. Direct imaging provides a steady flow of newly discovered giant planets and brown dwarf companions. These multi-object systems can provide information about the formation of low-mass companions in wide orbits and/or help us to speculate about possible migration scenarios. Accurate classification of companions is crucial for testing formation pathways. Aims. In this work we further characterise the recently discovered candidate for a planetary-mass companion CS Cha b and determine if it is still accreting. Methods. MUSE is a four-laser-adaptive-optics-assisted medium-resolution integral-field spectrograph in the optical part of the spectrum. We observed the CS Cha system to obtain the first spectrum of CS Cha b. The companion is characterised by modelling both the spectrum from 6300 to 9300 and the photometry using archival data from the…
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