Cha 1107−7626

Cha 1107−7626

Cha 1107−7626 is the orange-red object in the middle of this DECam image.
Observation data
Epoch J2000      Equinox J2000
Constellation Chamaeleon
Right ascension 11h 07m 07.72512s
Declination −76° 26 32.5176
Characteristics
Evolutionary stage planetary-mass brown dwarf
Spectral type L0 ±1
Apparent magnitude (J) 17.61 ±0.03
Apparent magnitude (H) 16.80 ±0.03
Apparent magnitude (Ks) 15.91 ±0.02
Astrometry
Proper motion (μ) RA: −13.8 ±0.8 mas/yr
Dec.: −0.4 ±3.2 mas/yr
Distance~620 ly
(~190 pc)
Details
Mass6−10 MJup
Luminosity (bolometric)0.00033 L
Surface gravity (log g)3.5 cgs
Temperature1900 ±100 K
Age1−5 Myr
Other designations
WISE J110707.72-762632.5, WISEA J110707.69-762632.5, [L2007b] Cha J11070768-7626326
Database references
SIMBADdata

Cha 1107−7626 (Cha J11070768−7626326) is a free-floating planetary-mass object in the Chamaeleon I star-forming region, about 190 parsecs (620 ly) distant from the Solar System. It is the lowest-mass object with hydrocarbons detected in its disk (as of May 2025). The object is located north-west of IC 2631.

Cha 1107−7626 was discovered in 2008 by Kevin Luhman et al. with the Spitzer Space Telescope and the Magellan II telescope. The researchers estimated a spectral type of L0, due to it having weaker TiO and VO absorption compared compared to other low-mass members of the Chamaeleon I region, such as OTS 44 and Cha 110913−773444. Initially the mass was estimated to be 0.004-0.01 M (4.2-10.5 MJ). A work by Laura Flagg et al. (2025) observed the object with the JWST instruments NIRSpec and MIRI. This work refined the mass of Cha 1107−7626 to 6-10 MJ. It also detected hydrocarbons in the disk of this planetary-mass object.