Searching for radio emission from stellar wind-magnetosphere interaction or co-rotation breakdown in brown dwarfs
Rebeca Pirvu Malanda, Simranpreet Kaur, Daniele Vigan\`o, \`Oscar Morata, Josep Miquel Girart, \'Alvaro S\'anchez Monge, Devojyoti Kansabanik, Mario Damasso, Mayank Narang, Gemma Busquet, Juan Carlos Morales, Fabio Del Sordo, Kaustubh Hakim, Manoj Purvankara

TL;DR
This study used radio telescopes to search for magnetic field-related radio emissions from brown dwarf companions but found no signals, setting upper limits and highlighting the need for more sensitive future observations.
Contribution
First systematic radio search for brown dwarf companions' emissions, providing upper limits and discussing implications for magnetic activity models.
Findings
No radio emissions detected from the targets.
Set upper limits of ~25 μJy/beam in Stokes V.
Highlighted the importance of future sensitive radio observations.
Abstract
With the improvements in radio interferometry sensitivity, the quest for coherent radio emission from exoplanets and ultra-cool dwarfs, which is indicative of their magnetic fields, has gained significant momentum in recent years. We investigated the relatively unexplored possibility of radio emission from wide-orbit brown dwarf companions, which may radiate through rapid rotation, as in isolated ultra-cool dwarfs, or via interactions between their extended magnetospheres and the host star's wind. We analysed hours of Upgraded Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope and Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array data for a set of well-characterized systems previously unobserved at 0.3-2 GHz. The targets include companions orbiting the G-type stars HD 26161 and BD-004475, the K-type HD 153557A and Oph, and the M dwarfs GJ 3626 and 2MJ01225093-2439505. No detections were obtained with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
