GRAVITY K-band spectroscopy of HD 206893 B: brown dwarf or exoplanet
J. Kammerer, S. Lacour, T. Stolker, P. Molli\`ere, D. K. Sing, E., Nasedkin, P. Kervella, J. J. Wang, K. Ward-Duong, M. Nowak, R. Abuter, A., Amorim, R. Asensio-Torres, M. Baub\"ock, M. Benisty, J.-P. Berger, H. Beust,, S. Blunt, A. Boccaletti, A. Bohn, M.-L. Bolzer, M. Bonnefoy

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution spectroscopy and orbital analysis to determine whether HD 206893 B is a brown dwarf or exoplanet, revealing its atmospheric properties, orbit, and mass estimates.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed atmospheric modeling and orbital characterization of HD 206893 B, including the effects of high-altitude dust clouds and refined mass and age estimates.
Findings
HD 206893 B has an extremely red color and shallow water absorption features.
The object is likely a young, low-mass brown dwarf or planetary-mass companion.
The orbit is eccentric with a mutual inclination less than 34.4 degrees.
Abstract
We aim to reveal the nature of the reddest known substellar companion HD 206893 B by studying its near-infrared colors and spectral morphology and by investigating its orbital motion. We fit atmospheric models for giant planets and brown dwarfs and perform spectral retrievals with petitRADTRANS and ATMO on the observed GRAVITY, SPHERE, and GPI spectra of HD 206893 B. To recover its unusual spectral features, we include additional extinction by high-altitude dust clouds made of enstatite grains in the atmospheric model fits. We also infer the orbital parameters of HD 206893 B by combining the precision astrometry from GRAVITY with data from the literature and constrain the mass and position of HD 206893 C based on the Gaia proper motion anomaly of the system. The extremely red color and the very shallow water absorption feature of HD 206893 B can…
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