Bibcode
DOI
Béjar, V. J. S.; Martín, E. L.; Zapatero Osorio, M. R.; Rebolo, R.; Barrado y Navascués, D.; Bailer-Jones, C. A. L.; Mundt, R.; Baraffe, I.; Chabrier, C.; Allard, F.
Bibliographical reference
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 556, Issue 2, pp. 830-836.
Advertised on:
8
2001
Journal
Citations
172
Refereed citations
138
Description
We combine results from imaging searches for substellar objects in the
σ Orionis cluster and follow-up photometric and spectroscopic
observations to derive a census of the brown dwarf population in a
region of 847 arcmin2. We identify 64 very low mass cluster
member candidates in this region. We have available three-color (I, Z,
and J) photometry for all of them, spectra for 24 objects, and K
photometry for 27% of our sample. These data provide a well-defined
sequence in the I versus I-J and I versus I-K color-magnitude diagrams
and indicate that the cluster exhibits little reddening despite its
young age (~5 Myr). Using state-of-the-art evolutionary models, we
derive a mass function from the low-mass stars (0.2 Msolar)
across the complete brown dwarf domain (0.075 to 0.013
Msolar) and into the realm of free-floating planetary-mass
objects (<=0.013 Msolar). We find that the mass spectrum
(dN/dm)~m-α increases toward lower masses, with an
exponent α=0.8+/-0.4. Our results suggest that planetary-mass
isolated objects could be as common as brown dwarfs; both kinds of
objects together would be as numerous as stars in the cluster. If the
distribution of stellar and substellar masses in σ Orionis is
representative of the Galactic disk, older and much lower luminosity
free-floating planetary-mass objects with masses down to about 0.005
Msolar should be abundant in the solar vicinity, with a
density similar to M-type stars.