Stars stably accreting from substellar objects

Avatar
Poster
Voice is AI-generated
Connected to paperThis paper is a preprint and has not been certified by peer review

Stars stably accreting from substellar objects

Authors

Aaron Householder, Kaitlyn Shin, Kevin B. Burdge, Thomas R. Marsh, Saul A. Rappaport, Kareem El-Badry, Joheen Chakraborty, Emma Chickles, Fei Dai, Matthew J. Graham, S. R. Kulkarni, Pablo Rodríguez-Gil, Andrew Vanderburg, Samuel Whitebook

Abstract

Substellar objects such as brown dwarfs and planets are generally expected to remain detached from their main-sequence host stars unless orbital decay or stellar expansion brings them into contact, leading to rapid engulfment and destruction. Such a fate is predicted for the Earth and other rocky planets in our solar system; however, in certain cases, theory also allows for stable long-lived mass transfer from a substellar object onto its main-sequence host, though such accretion has never been directly observed. Here we report the first direct observations of stable mass transfer from a substellar object onto a main-sequence star. In particular, we identify two binaries, ZTF J0440+2325 and ZTF J1444+4820, with orbital periods of just 87 and 67 minutes, respectively, in which a brown dwarf stably transfers mass onto an M dwarf companion. These systems demonstrate that the fate of some substellar objects is not rapid engulfment and destruction, but instead gradual consumption for potentially billions of years.

Follow Us on

0 comments

Add comment