lodgy wrote:Do you have other examples ?
If you have a current version of
nearstars.stc, you can find a lot of isolated brown dwarfs in the vicinity of the sun. For example, look at WISE 1506+7027, DENIS 0817-6155, LP 944-20, DENIS 0255-4700 (just a few I pulled out while scrolling through the database).
We've been discovering binary brown dwarf systems for a decade or a more, and some are close enough to be in
nearstars.stc. Apart from the one I just added, there's another isolated pair in Celestia: 2MASS 0939-2448 A&B, which are such dim T dwarfs you need to go pretty close before you see them. Also there's CI Ind - a brown dwarf binary that's probably in orbit around Epsilon Indi, though it lies more than a thousand AU from the star.
lodgy wrote:OK but towards the sun or in the opposite direction ?
If you take a look at the discovery paper for the WISE J104915.57-531906.1 binary, you'll see they don't report the radial motion.