We present Keck/OSIRIS 1.1-1.8 um adaptive optics integral field spectroscopy
of the planetary-mass companion to GSC 06214-00210, a member of the ~5 Myr
Upper Scorpius OB association. We infer a spectral type of L0+/-1, and our
spectrum exhibits multiple signs of youth. The most notable feature is
exceptionally strong PaBeta emission (EW=-11.4 +/- 0.3 A) which signals the
presence of a circumplanetary accretion disk. The luminosity of GSC 06214-00210
b combined with its age yields a model-dependent mass of 14 +/- 2 MJup, making
it the lowest-mass companion to show evidence of a disk. With a projected
separation of 320 AU, the formation of GSC 06214-00210 b and other very
low-mass companions on similarly wide orbits is unclear. One proposed mechanism
is formation at close separations followed by planet-planet scattering to much
larger orbits. Since that scenario involves a close encounter with another
massive body, which is probably destructive to circumplanetary disks, it is
unlikely that GSC 06214-00210 b underwent a scattering event in the past. This
implies that planet-planet scattering is not solely responsible for the
population of gas giants on wide orbits. More generally, the identification of
disks around young planetary companions on wide orbits offers a novel method to
constrain the formation pathway of these objects, which is otherwise
notoriously difficult to do for individual systems. We also refine the spectral
type of the primary from M1 to K7 and detect a mild (2-sigma) excess at 22 um
using WISE photometry.Comment: 25 pages, 13 figures; Accepted by Ap