Bibcode
                                    
                            McCaughrean, M. J.; Close, L. M.; Scholz, R.-D.; Lenzen, R.; Biller, B.; Brandner, W.; Hartung, M.; Lodieu, N.
    Referencia bibliográfica
                                    Astronomy and Astrophysics, v.413, p.1029-1036 (2004)
Fecha de publicación:
    
                        1
            
                        2004
            
  Revista
                                    
                            Número de citas
                                    163
                            Número de citas referidas
                                    144
                            Descripción
                                    We have carried out high angular resolution near-infrared imaging and
low-resolution (R˜1000) spectroscopy of the nearest known brown
dwarf, varepsilon Indi B, using the ESO VLT NAOS/CONICA adaptive optics
system. We find it to be a close binary (as also noted by Volk et al.
2003), with an angular separation of 0.732 arcsec, corresponding to 2.65
AU at the 3.626 pc distance of the varrepsilon Indi system. In our
discovery paper (Scholz et al. 2003), we concluded that varepsilon Indi
B was a ˜50 MJup T2.5 dwarf: our revised finding is
that the two system components (varepsilon Indi Ba and varrepsilon
Indi Bb) have spectral types of T1 and T6, respectively, and estimated
masses of 47 and 28 MJup, respectively, assuming an age of
1.3 Gyr. Errors in the masses are ±10 and ±7
MJup, respectively, dominated by the uncertainty in the age
determination (0.8-2 Gyr range). This uniquely well-characterised T
dwarf binary system should prove important in the study of low-mass,
cool brown dwarfs. The two components are bright and relatively
well-resolved: varepsilon Indi B is the only T dwarf binary in which
spectra have been obtained for both components. The system has a
well-established distance and age. Finally, their orbital motion can be
measured on a fairly short timescale (nominal orbital period ˜15
yrs), permitting an accurate determination of the true total system
mass, helping to calibrate brown dwarf evolutionary models.
Based on observations collected with the ESO VLT, Paranal, Chile.