In our ongoing search for close and faint companions around T Tauri stars, we
found a very faint (Ks=14.9mag, Ks_0=14.4mag) object, just ~2.67" northwest of
the Chamaeleon star-forming region member CT Cha corresponding to a projected
separation of ~440AU at 165+/-30 pc. We show that CT Cha A and this faint
object form a common proper motion pair from data of the VLT Adaptive Optics
(AO) instrument NACO taken in February 2006 and March 2007 and that the
companion is by >=4 sigma significance not a stationary background object. Our
AO integral field spectroscopy with SINFONI in J, and H+K bands yields a
temperature of 2600+/-250K for the companion and an optical extinction of
A_V=5.2+/-0.8mag, when compared to spectra calculated from Drift-Phoenix model
atmospheres. We demonstrate the validity of the model fits by comparison to
several other well-known young sub-stellar objects. Relative flux calibration
of the bands was achieved using photometry from the NACO imaging data. We
conclude that the CT Cha companion is a very low-mass member of Chamaeleon and
very likely a physical companion to CT Cha, as the probability for a by chance
alignment is <=0.01. Due to a prominent Pa-Beta emission in the J-band,
accretion is probably still ongoing onto the CT Cha companion. From temperature
and luminosity (log(Lbol/Lsun)= -2.68+/-0.21), we derive a radius of
R=2.20+0.81-0.60 R_Jup. We find a consistent mass of M=17+/-6 MJup for the CT
Cha companion from both its luminosity and temperature when placed on
evolutionary tracks. Hence, the CT Cha companion is most likely a wide brown
dwarf companion or possibly even a planetary mass object.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in A&