Direct radio discovery of a cold brown dwarf
H. K. Vedantham, J. R. Callingham, T. W. Shimwell, T. Dupuy, William, M. J. Best, Michael C. Liu, Zhoujian Zhang, K. De, L. Lamy, P. Zarka, H. J., A. Rottgering, A. Shulevski

TL;DR
This paper reports the first direct radio detection of a cold brown dwarf, revealing its magnetic properties and suggesting low-frequency radio surveys can find such objects undetectable in infrared.
Contribution
It presents the discovery of a cold methane brown dwarf via low-frequency radio emission, a novel method for identifying sub-stellar objects.
Findings
Detected a circularly polarized radio source at 144 MHz.
Determined the brown dwarf's spectral type as T6.5±1.
Found the magnetic field strength to be ≥25 G.
Abstract
Magnetospheric processes seen in gas-giants such as aurorae and circularly-polarized cyclotron maser radio emission have been detected from some brown dwarfs. However, previous radio observations targeted known brown dwarfs discovered via their infrared emission. Here we report the discovery of BDR J1750+3809, a circularly polarized radio source detected around 144 MHz with the LOFAR telescope. Follow-up near-infrared photometry and spectroscopy show that BDR J1750+3809 is a cold methane dwarf of spectral type T at a distance of . The quasi-quiescent radio spectral luminosity of BDR J1750+3809 is which is over two orders of magnitude larger than that of the known population of comparable spectral type. This could be due to a preferential geometric alignment or an electrodynamic…
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