BEBOP VIII. SOPHIE radial velocities reveal an eccentric, circumbinary brown dwarf
Amaury H.M.J. Triaud, Thomas A. Baycroft, Neda Heidari, Alexandre Santerne, Aleyna Adamson, Isabelle Boisse, Gavin A.L. Coleman, Alexandre C.M. Correia, Yasmin T. Davis, Magali Deleuil, Guillaume H\'ebrard, David V. Martin, Pierre F.L. Maxted, Richard P. Nelson, Lalitha Sairam

TL;DR
This study reports the discovery of a high-mass, eccentric circumbinary brown dwarf orbiting a binary star system, providing insights into planet formation and system stability in such environments.
Contribution
First detection of a massive, eccentric circumbinary companion with detailed orbital parameters, expanding understanding of planet formation around binary stars.
Findings
Discovered a 20.9 Mjup circumbinary companion on a 1800-day orbit.
The system's orbital configuration is near the edge of stability.
The companion's true mass is constrained to less than 26.3 Mjup.
Abstract
Circumbinary configurations offer a test of planet formation in an altered environment, where the inner binary has perturbed a protoplanetary disc. Comparisons of the physical and orbital parameters between the circumbinary planet population and the population of exoplanets orbiting single stars will reveal how these disc perturbations affect the assembly of planets. Circumbinary exoplanets detected thus far typically have masses raising the question of whether high-mass circumbinary planets are possible, and also whether population features such as the brown dwarf desert would appear in circumbinary configurations like for single star systems. Here, we report observations taken with the SOPHIE high-resolution spectrograph. These observations reveal an outer companion, on an eccentric (), orbit,…
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