James S. Jenkins, Yakiv V. Pavlenko, Oleksiy Ivanyuk, Jose Gallardo, Matias I. Jones, Avril . C. Day-Jones, Hugh R. A. Jones, Maria-Teresa Ruiz, David J. Pinfield, Larissa Yakovina
We present new ages and abundance measurements for the pre-main sequence star
PZ Tel. PZ Tel was recently found to host a young and low-mass companion. Using
FEROS spectra we have measured atomic abundances (e.g. Fe and Li) and
chromospheric activity for PZ Tel and used these to obtain metallicity and age
estimates for the companion. We find PZ Tel to be a rapidly rotating
(vsini=73\pm5km/s), ~solar metallicity star (logN(Fe)=-4.37\pm0.06dex or
[Fe/H]=0.05\pm0.20dex) with a measured mean logR'HK of -4.12. We measure a NLTE
lithium abundance of logN(Li)=3.1\pm0.1dex, which from depletion models gives
rise to an age of 7+4-2 Myrs for the system. The measured chromospheric
activity returns an age of 26\pm2Myrs, as does fitting pre-main sequence
evolutionary tracks (Tau_evol=22\pm3Myrs), both of which are in disagreement
with the lithium age. We speculate on reasons for this difference and introduce
new models for lithium depletion that incorporates both rotation and magnetic
field affects. We also synthesize solar, metal-poor and metal-rich substellar
evolutionary models to better determine the bulk properties of PZ Tel B,
showing that PZ Tel B is probably more massive than previous estimates, meaning
the companion is not a giant exoplanet. We show how PZ Tel B compares to other
currently known age and metallicity benchmark systems and try to empirically
test the effects of dust opacity as a function of metallicity on the near
infrared colours of brown dwarfs. Current models suggest that in the near
infrared observations are more sensitive to low-mass companions orbiting more
metal-rich stars. Finally, an emerging anti-correlation is found between
metallicity and the near infrared colours that may point towards dust settling
deeper in the atmospheres of metal-rich substellar objects, giving rise to a
possible origin for the peculiar blue L dwarfs. [Abridged]
View original:
http://arxiv.org/abs/1111.7001
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