Characterization of the Benchmark Binary Nltt 33370

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Author
Schlieder, Joshua E.
Bonnefoy, Mickaël
Herbst, T. M.
Lépine, Sébastien
Henning, Thomas
Skemer, Andrew
Chauvin, Gaël
Rice, Emily
Biller, Beth
Girard, Julien H. V.
Lagrange, Anne-Marie
Hinz, Philip
Defrère, Denis
Bergfors, Carolina
Brandner, Wolfgang
Lacour, Sylvestre
Skrutskie, Michael
Leisenring, Jarron
Note: Order does not necessarily reflect citation order of authors.
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https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637x/783/1/27Metadata
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Schlieder, Joshua E., Mickaël Bonnefoy, T. M. Herbst, Sébastien Lépine, Edo Berger, Thomas Henning, Andrew Skemer, et al. 2014. Characterization of the Benchmark Binary Nltt 33370. The Astrophysical Journal 783, no. 1: 27. doi:10.1088/0004-637x/783/1/27.Abstract
We report the confirmation of the binary nature of the nearby, very low-mass system NLTT 33370 with adaptive optics imaging and present resolved near-infrared photometry and integrated light optical and near-infrared spectroscopy to characterize the system. VLT-NaCo and LBTI-LMIRCam images show significant orbital motion between 2013 February and 2013 April. Optical spectra reveal weak, gravity sensitive alkali lines and strong lithium 6708 ˚A absorption that indicate the system is younger than field age. VLT-SINFONI near-IR spectra also show weak, gravity sensitive features and spectral morphology that is consistent with other young, very low-mass dwarfs. We combine the constraints from all age diagnostics to estimate a system age of ∼30-200 Myr. The 1.2-4.7 µm spectral energy distribution of the components point toward Teff = 3200 ± 500 K and Teff = 3100 ± 500 K for NLTT 33370 A and B, respectively. The observed spectra, derived temperatures, and estimated age combine to constrain the component spectral types to the range M6-M8. Evolutionary models predict masses of 113 ±8 MJup and 106±7 MJup from the estimated luminosities of the components. KPNO-Phoenix spectra allow us to estimate the systemic radial velocity of the binary. The Galactic kinematics of NLTT 33370AB are broadly consistent with other young stars in the Solar neighborhood. However, definitive membership in a young, kinematic group cannot be assigned at this time and further follow-up observations are necessary to fully constrain the system’s kinematics. The proximity,age, and late-spectral type of this binary make it very novel and an ideal target for rapid, complete orbit determination. The system is one of only a few model calibration benchmarks at young ages and very low-masses.
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