Bibcode
DOI
Martín, Eduardo L.; Delfosse, Xavier; Basri, Gibor; Goldman, Bertrand; Forveille, Thierry; Zapatero Osorio, Maria Rosa
Bibliographical reference
The Astronomical Journal, Volume 118, Issue 5, pp. 2466-2482.
Advertised on:
11
1999
Citations
411
Refereed citations
356
Description
We present spectra for 12 new ultracool dwarfs found in the DENIS
infrared survey. Seven of them have spectral types at the bottom of the
M-class (M8-M9.5), and the other five belong to the cooler ``L'' class.
We also present spectra for the two new L dwarfs found by the EROS 2
proper-motion survey. We introduce a scheme for L dwarf classification
that is based on an extension to cooler spectra of a pseudocontinuum
ratio previously defined for M dwarfs. For calibrating the spectral
subclasses, we use a temperature scale for late-M and L dwarfs recently
obtained by Basri et al. from synthetic spectrum fitting of
high-resolution profiles of Cs I and Rb I resonance lines. We define
that the subclass range from L0 to L6 corresponds to the temperature
range from 2200 K to 1600 K. Our subclasses L0, L1, and L2 agree with
recent findings by Kirkpatrick et al., but then they diverge such that
our L6 is equivalent to their L8. We find that late-M and L dwarf
subclasses can be assigned either in the optical with the PC3 index or
in the near-infrared with the H2O H-band index. We discuss
the main photospheric features present in L dwarf spectra, in particular
in the region 400-650 nm, which has never been shown before. The TiO
bands at 549.7, 559.7, 615.9, and 638.4 nm fade with decreasing
temperature, but do not vanish until well inside the L domain (~L5). The
Na I 589.0, 589.6 nm resonance doublet in our latest object (L6) becomes
the broadest atomic feature ever seen in any cool dwarf. We do not
detect Hα emission in our L dwarfs later than L3. We
discuss the ages and masses of our objects using their temperatures and
absence or presence of lithium. Finally, we compare two L1 dwarfs with
different gravities (one with lithium and one without it) and discuss
differences in spectral features.