Abstract

Hα is a powerful tracer of accretion and chromospheric activity, which has been detected in the case of young brown dwarfs and even recently in planetary mass companions (e.g. PDS70 b and c). Hα detections and characterisation of brown dwarf and planet companions can further our knowledge of their formation and evolution, and expanding such a sample is therefore our primary goal. We used the Zurich Imaging POLarimeter (ZIMPOL) of the SPHERE instrument at the Very Large Telescope (VLT) to observe the known 38−72 MJ companion orbiting PZ Tel, obtaining simultaneous angular differential imaging observations in both continuum and narrow Hα band. We detect Hα emission from the companion, making this only the second Hα detection of a companion using the SPHERE instrument. We used our newly added astrometric measurements to update the orbital analysis of PZ Tel B, and we used our photometric measurements to evaluate the Hα line flux. Given the estimated bolometric luminosity, we obtained an Hα activity (log(LHα/Lbol)) between −4.16 and −4.31. The Hα activity of PZ Tel B is consistent with known average activity levels for M dwarf of the same spectral type. Given the absence of a known gaseous disk and the relatively old age of the system (24 Myr), we conclude that the Hα emission around PZ Tel B is likely due to chromospheric activity.

Highlights

  • Hα emission from low-mass stars and brown dwarfs can have multiple origins

  • Given the newly extended astrometric baseline, we explored the possible orbital solutions using the Python package PyAstrOFit1 (Wertz et al 2017) which provides a series of tools to fit orbits using the emcee package (Foreman-Mackey et al 2013) with the modified Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) approach described in Goodman & Weare (2010)

  • We presented SPHERE/Zurich Imaging POLarimeter (ZIMPOL) observations of the known sub-stellar M dwarf companion around PZ Tel, taken in both Hα continuum and narrow band filter

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Summary

Introduction

Hα emission from low-mass stars and brown dwarfs can have multiple origins. In the case of young objects (

PZ Tel B
Observations and data reduction
Analysis and results
Astrometry and flux contrast
Photometry
Orbital constraints
Findings
Discussion and conclusions
Full Text
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