Populating the brown dwarf and stellar boundary: Five stars with transiting companions near the hydrogen-burning mass limit
Nolan Grieves, Fran\c{c}ois Bouchy, Monika Lendl, Theron Carmichael,, Ismael Mireles, Avi Shporer, Kim K. McLeod, Karen A. Collins, Rafael Brahm,, Keivan G. Stassun, Sam Gill, Luke G. Bouma, Tristan Guillot, Marion, Cointepas, Leonardo A. Dos Santos, Sarah L. Casewell

TL;DR
This study reports the discovery and characterization of five transiting companions near the hydrogen-burning mass limit, providing valuable data to understand the boundary between brown dwarfs and low-mass stars.
Contribution
It presents new measurements of five objects near the stellar-brown dwarf boundary, including their masses, radii, ages, and orbital properties, using combined TESS and ground-based observations.
Findings
Companions have masses between 77 and 98 Jupiter masses.
Some companions show signs of spin-orbit synchronization and tidal circularization.
The host stars include the hottest known main-sequence star with a transiting brown dwarf or low-mass star.
Abstract
We report the discovery of five transiting companions near the hydrogen-burning mass limit in close orbits around main sequence stars originally identified by the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) as TESS Objects of Interest (TOIs): TOI-148, TOI-587, TOI-681, TOI-746, and TOI-1213. Using TESS and ground-based photometry as well as radial velocities from the CORALIE, CHIRON, TRES, and FEROS spectrographs, we found the companions have orbital periods between 4.8 and 27.2 days, masses between 77 and 98 , and radii between 0.81 and 1.66 . These targets have masses near the uncertain lower limit of hydrogen core fusion (73-96 ), which separates brown dwarfs and low-mass stars. We constrained young ages for TOI-587 (0.2 0.1 Gyr) and TOI-681 (0.17 0.03 Gyr) and found them to have relatively larger radii compared…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Educational Leadership and Practices
