Sub-brown dwarf
A sub-brown dwarf or planetary-mass brown dwarf is an astronomical object that formed in the same manner as stars and brown dwarfs but that has a planetary mass, therefore by definition below the limiting mass for thermonuclear fusion of deuterium.
Some researchers include them in the category of rogue planets whereas others call them planetary-mass brown dwarfs.
Description
Sub-brown dwarfs are formed in the manner of stars, through the collapse of a gas cloud but there is no consensus amongst astronomers on whether the formation process should be taken into account when classifying an object as a planet. Free-floating sub-brown dwarfs can be observationally indistinguishable from rogue planets, which originally formed around a star and were ejected from orbit. Similarly, a sub-brown dwarf formed free-floating in a star cluster may be captured into orbit around a star, making distinguishing sub-brown dwarfs and large planets also difficult. A definition for the term "sub-brown dwarf" was put forward by the IAU Working Group on Extra-Solar Planets, which defined it as a free-floating body found in young star clusters below the lower mass cut-off of brown dwarfs.Lower mass limit
The smallest mass of gas cloud that could collapse to form a sub-brown dwarf is about 1 Jupiter mass. This is because to collapse by gravitational contraction requires radiating away energy as heat and this is limited by the opacity of the gas. A 3 MJ candidate is described in a 2007 paper.List of possible sub-brown dwarfs
Orbiting one or more stars
There is no consensus whether these companions of stars should be considered sub-brown dwarfs or planets. Some authors agree these objects should be considered sub-brown dwarfs, since they likely formed on their own, like a "failed star".Nonetheless, the IAU working definition of an exoplanet ignored formation mechanism as a criterion, and based on it these objects would be considered planets.
- WD 0806-661 B
- HD 106906 b
- ROXs 42Bb
Orbiting a brown dwarf
WISE J0336−0143B
WISE J0336−0143B orbits a brown dwarf or sub-brown dwarf. The primary has a mass of 8.5 to 18 and secondary has a mass of 5-11.5. This object does not fit the IAU working definition of an exoplanet. This definition requires a mass ratio of about q<0.04, but the mass ratio of WISE J0336−0143AB is q=0.61±0.05. It also does not fit the definition of a rogue planet, because it is gravitationally bound to a brown dwarf. It could be considered a planet according to alternative definitions, but according to the IAU it only fits the definition of sub-brown dwarf.2M1207b
2M1207b orbits around a young brown dwarf with a circumstellar disk and itself is likely surrounded by a circumstellar disk. The mass ratio is well above the upper limit of q=0.04 for exoplanets according to the IAU.Others
Other examples of planetary-mass objects orbiting brown dwarfs and with MB<13 and q>0.04:- CFHTWIR-Oph 98B, with MB= and q=
- 2MASS J0249-0557ABc, with Mc= and
Free-floating
- WISE 0855–0714 3–10 MJ about 7 light years away
- S Ori 52
- UGPS 0722-05 10–25 MJ 13 light years away
- Cha 110913-773444 5–15 MJ 163 light years away
- CFBDSIR 2149−0403 4–7 MJ 130 light years away
- OTS 44 11.5 MJ 550 light years away
- PSO J318.5−22 6–8 MJ about 80 light years away
- Cha 1107−7626 620 light years away