A brown dwarf orbiting around the planetary-nebula central binary KV Vel
S.-B. Qian, L.-Y. Zhu, F.-X. Li, L.-J. Li, Z.-T. Han, J.-J. He, L., Zang, L.-F. Chang, Q.-B. Sun, M.-Y. Li, H.-T. Zhang, and F.-Z. Yan

TL;DR
This study identifies a brown dwarf companion orbiting the central binary of planetary nebula KV Vel, revealing a cyclic period variation likely caused by a tertiary brown dwarf, and discusses its formation through common-envelope evolution.
Contribution
First detection of a brown dwarf companion around a planetary nebula central binary, supported by period variation analysis and light curve stability.
Findings
Cyclic period variation with a 29.55-year period detected.
Tertiary companion mass estimated at ~0.068 solar masses.
Brown dwarf nature confirmed below hydrogen-burning limit.
Abstract
KV Vel is a non-eclipsing short-period (P = 0.3571 days) close binary containing a very hot subdwarf primary (77000 K) and a cool low-mass secondary star (3400 K) that is located at the center of the planetary nebula DS 1. The changes in the orbital period of the close binary were analyzed based on 262 new times of light maximum together with those compiled from the literature. It is discovered that the O-C curve shows a small-amplitude (0.0034 days) cyclic period variation with a period of 29.55 years. The explanation by the solar-type magnetic activity cycles of the cool component is ruled out because the required energies are much larger than the total radiant energy of this component in a whole cycle. Therefore, the cyclic variation was plausibly explained as the light-travel time effect via the presence of a tertiary component, which is supported by the periodic changes of the O-C…
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