Expanding the Y Dwarf Census with Spitzer Follow-up of the Coldest CatWISE Solar Neighborhood Discoveries


Abstract in English

We present Spitzer 3.6$mu$m and 4.5$mu$m follow-up of 170 candidate extremely cool brown dwarfs newly discovered via the combination of WISE and NEOWISE imaging at 3$-$5$mu$m. CatWISE, a joint analysis of archival WISE and NEOWISE data, has improved upon the motion measurements of AllWISE by leveraging a $>$10$times$ time baseline enhancement, from 0.5 years (AllWISE) to 6.5 years (CatWISE). As a result, CatWISE motion selection has yielded a large sample of previously unrecognized brown dwarf candidates, many of which have archival detections exclusively in the WISE 4.6$mu$m (W2) channel, suggesting that they could be both exceptionally cold and nearby. Where these objects go undetected in WISE W1 (3.4$mu$m), Spitzer can provide critically informative detections at 3.6$mu$m. Of our motion-confirmed discoveries, seventeen have a best-fit Spitzer [3.6]$-$[4.5] color most consistent with spectral type Y. CWISEP J144606.62$-$231717.8 ($mu approx 1.3$/yr) is likely the reddest, and therefore potentially coldest, member of our sample with a very uncertain [3.6]$-$[4.5] color of 3.71 $pm$ 0.44 magnitudes. We also highlight our highest proper motion discovery, WISEA J153429.75$-$104303.3, with $mu approx 2.7$/yr. Given that the prior list of confirmed and presumed Y dwarfs consists of just 27 objects, the Spitzer follow-up presented in this work has substantially expanded the sample of identified Y dwarfs. Our new discoveries thus represent significant progress toward understanding the bottom of the substellar mass function, investigating the diversity of the Y dwarf population, and selecting optimal brown dwarf targets for JWST spectroscopy.

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