Exploring the Extremes: Characterizing a New Population of Old and Cold Brown Dwarfs
A. M. Meisner, S. K. Leggett, S. E. Logsdon, A. C. Schneider, P., Tremblin, M. Phillips

TL;DR
This study identifies and characterizes a new population of cold, metal-poor brown dwarfs, including the first ground-based detection of an anomalous Y dwarf candidate, WISEA J153429.75-104303.3, revealing its unusual spectral features.
Contribution
The paper reports the discovery and near-infrared characterization of a new population of old, cold, and metal-poor brown dwarfs, including the first ground-based detection of an unusual Y dwarf candidate.
Findings
Detection of 14 near-infrared photometric points for 8 targets.
First ground-based detection of WISEA J153429.75-104303.3.
Indications of subsolar metallicity and low temperature (400-550 K) for the candidate.
Abstract
Mapping out the populations of thick disk and halo brown dwarfs is important for understanding the metallicity dependence of low-temperature atmospheres and the substellar mass function. Recently, a new population of cold and metal-poor brown dwarfs has been discovered, with 1400 K and metallicity 1 dex. This population includes what may be the first known "extreme T-type subdwarfs" and possibly the first Y-type subdwarf, WISEA J153429.75104303.3. We have conducted a Gemini YJHK/Ks photometric follow-up campaign targeting potentially metal-poor T and Y dwarfs, utilizing the GNIRS and Flamingos-2 instruments. We present 14 near-infrared photometric detections of 8 unique targets: six T subdwarf candidates, one moderately metal poor Y dwarf candidate, and one Y subdwarf candidate. We have obtained the first ever ground-based detection of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
