Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2248/8914
Title: First discovery of a fast-rotating blue straggler in a compact binary with a sub-stellar companion
Authors: Sheikh, A. H
Medhi, B. J
Messina, S
Subramaniam, A
Panwar, Neelam
Sagar, R
Keywords: Methods: statistical
Techniques: radial velocities
Binaries: spectroscopic
Blue stragglers
Brown dwarfs
Issue Date: Feb-2026
Publisher: Oxford University Press on behalf of Royal Astronomical Society
Citation: Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Vol. 545, No. 4, staf2130
Abstract: We report the first discovery of a brown-dwarf (BD) companion using a radial velocity-based study of a rapidly rotating blue straggler star (BSS) in a short-period close binary system in NGC 2243. Multi-epoch spectra from VLT/FLAMES- GIRAFFE, analysed using ISPEC , yield stellar parameters for the primary: Teff = 8800 ± 700 K, Log ( g ) = 4 . 49 ± 0 . 58, [M / H ] = −0 . 31 ±0 . 15, and vsin ( i) = 95 . 63 ± 9 . 78 km s−1 . A Keplerian fit to multi-epoch radial velocity data reveals a nearly circular orbit ( e = 0 . 03 ± 0 . 01) with period P = 0 . 234 ±0 . 007 d, semi-amplitude K = 4 . 79 ±0 . 05 km s−1 , and systemic velocity γ = 64 . 97 ±0 . 03 km s−1 . The primary has a mass of 1 . 72 ±0 . 12 M , radius 1 . 23 ±0 . 22 R , and age of 0 . 51 ±0 . 07 Gyr, while the orbital separation is 1 . 94 ± 0 . 05 R . The companion mass can range between 0.0199 and 0.099 M , depending on inclination; thus, the lightest BSS companion detected so far. The system is likely tidally synchronized, implying an inclination of i = 21 . 08◦ ±4 . 49◦ and a companion mass of 0 . 056 ± 0 . 011 M , along with Teff ∼1000–2500 K and radius of ∼ 0 . 08 ± 0 . 13 R , it is likely to be a BD. This is the shortest period binary known inside the BD desert for main-sequence stars, and one of the most compact sub-stellar companions ever identified in a stellar system. Single-star SED fitting and a Gaia Renormalized Unit Weight Error (RUWE) of 1.01 show no excess or astrometric anomalies, supporting a faint companion. This rare non-eclipsing BSS–BD system offers a valuable insight into the binary interaction during BSS formation.
Description: Open Access
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2248/8914
ISSN: 0035-8711
Appears in Collections:IIAP Publications



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