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We present follow-up $Spitzer$ observations at 3.6$mu$m (ch1) and 4.5$mu$m (ch2) of CWISEP J144606.62$-$231717.8, one of the coldest known brown dwarfs in the solar neighborhood. This object was found by mining the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer ($WISE$) and $NEOWISE$ data via the CatWISE Preliminary Catalog by Meisner et al. (2019b), where an initial $Spitzer$ color of ch1$-$ch2 = 3.71$pm$0.44 mag was reported, implying it could be one of the reddest, and hence coldest, known brown dwarfs. Additional $Spitzer$ data presented here allows us to revise its color to ch1$-$ch2 = 2.986$pm$0.048 mag, which makes CWISEP J144606.62$-$231717.8 the 5th reddest brown dwarf ever observed. A preliminary trigonometric parallax measurement, based on a combination of $WISE$ and $Spitzer$ astrometry, places this object at a distance of 10.1$^{+1.7}_{-1.3}$ pc. Based on our improved $Spitzer$ color and preliminary parallax, CWISEP J144606.62$-$231717.8 has a $T_{rm eff}$ in the 310$-$360 K range. Assuming an age of 0.5$-$13 Gyr, this corresponds to a mass between 2 and 20 $M_{rm Jup}$.
We present the discovery of an extremely cold, nearby brown dwarf in the solar neighborhood, found in the CatWISE catalog (Eisenhardt et al., in prep.). Photometric follow-up with Spitzer reveals that the object, CWISEP J193518.59-154620.3, has ch1$-
We report the discovery of the youngest brown dwarf with a disk at 102 pc from the Sun, WISEA~J120037.79-784508.3 (W1200-7845), via the Disk Detective citizen science project. We establish that W1200-7845 is located in the 3.7$substack{+4.6 -1.4}$ M
Studying the accretion process in very low-mass objects has important implications for understanding their formation mechanism. Many nearby late-M dwarfs that have previously been identified in the field are in fact young brown dwarf members of nearb
We present comprehensive orbital analyses and dynamical masses for the substellar companions Gl~229~B, Gl~758~B, HD~13724~B, HD~19467~B, HD~33632~Ab, and HD~72946~B. Our dynamical fits incorporate radial velocities, relative astrometry, and most impo
We present high signal-to-noise ratio, precise $YJH$ photometry and $Y$ band (gpiwave~$mu$m) spectroscopy of HD 1160 B, a young substellar companion discovered from the Gemini NICI Planet Finding Campaign, using the Subaru Coronagraphic Extreme Adapt