First millimeter detection of the disk around a young, isolated, planetary-mass object
Artículo

Open/ Download
Publication date
2017-05-20Metadata
Show full item record
Cómo citar
Bayo, Amelia
Cómo citar
First millimeter detection of the disk around a young, isolated, planetary-mass object
Author
Abstract
OTS44 is one of only four free-floating planets known to have a disk. We have previously shown that it is the coolest and least massive known free-floating planet (similar to 12 M-Jup) with a substantial disk that is actively accreting. We have obtained Band 6 (233 GHz) ALMA continuum data of this very young disk-bearing object. The data show a clear unresolved detection of the source. We obtained disk-mass estimates via empirical correlations derived for young, higher-mass, central (substellar) objects. The range of values obtained are between 0.07 and 0.63 M-circle plus (dust masses). We compare the properties of this unique disk with those recently reported around higher-mass (brown dwarfs) young objects in order to infer constraints on its mechanism of formation. While extreme assumptions on dust temperature yield disk-mass values that could slightly diverge from the general trends found for more massive brown dwarfs, a range of sensible values provide disk masses compatible with a unique scaling relation between M-dust and M* through the substellar domain down to planetary masses.
Patrocinador
Proyecto Fondecyt Iniciacion
11140572
Science Foundation Ireland
13/ERC/12907
NSFC
11503087
Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province of China
BK20141046
German Academic Exchange Service
China Scholarship Council
UV
European Science Council under the Horizon 2020 framework program via the ERC Consolidator grant
CSF-648505
NASA through Hubble Fellowship - Space Telescope Science Institute
HST-HF2-51380.001-A
NASA
NAS 5-26555
Indexation
Artículo de publicación ISI
Quote Item
The Astrophysical Journal Letters, 841:L11 (4pp), 2017 May 20
Collections
The following license files are associated with this item: