The Astrophysical Journal Letters (Jan 2023)

Early Results from GLASS-JWST. XIII. A Faint, Distant, and Cold Brown Dwarf

  • Mario Nonino,
  • Karl Glazebrook,
  • Adam J. Burgasser,
  • Gianluca Polenta,
  • Takahiro Morishita,
  • Marius Lepinzan,
  • Marco Castellano,
  • Adriano Fontana,
  • Emiliano Merlin,
  • Andrea Bonchi,
  • Diego Paris,
  • Tommaso Treu,
  • Benedetta Vulcani,
  • Xin Wang,
  • Paola Santini,
  • Eros Vanzella,
  • Themiya Nanayakkara,
  • Amata Mercurio,
  • Piero Rosati,
  • Claudio Grillo,
  • Marusa Bradac

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/ac8e5f
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 942, no. 2
p. L29

Abstract

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We present the serendipitous discovery of a late T-type brown dwarf candidate in JWST NIRCam observations of the Early Release Science Abell 2744 parallel field. The discovery was enabled by the sensitivity of JWST at 4 μ m wavelengths and the panchromatic 0.9–4.5 μ m coverage of the spectral energy distribution. The unresolved point source has magnitudes F115W = 27.95 ± 0.15 and F444W = 25.84 ± 0.01 (AB), and its F115W−F444W and F356W−F444W colors match those expected for other known T dwarfs. We can exclude it as a reddened background star, high redshift quasar, or a very high redshift galaxy. Comparison with stellar atmospheric models indicates a temperature of T _eff ≈ 650 K and surface gravity $\mathrm{log}g\approx 5.25$ , implying a mass of 0.03 M _⊙ and age of 5 Gyr. We estimate the distance of this candidate to be 570–720 pc in a direction perpendicular to the Galactic plane, making it a likely thick disk or halo brown dwarf. These observations underscore the power of JWST to probe the very low-mass end of the substellar mass function in the Galactic thick disk and halo.

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