Bibcode
Lodieu, N.; Dobbie, P. D.; Deacon, N. R.; Hodgkin, S. T.; Hambly, N. C.; Jameson, R. F.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 380, Issue 2, pp. 712-732.
Advertised on:
9
2007
Citations
74
Refereed citations
61
Description
We present the results of a deep wide-field near-infrared survey of 12
deg2 of the Pleiades conducted as part of the United Kingdom
Infrared Telescope (UKIRT) Infrared Deep Sky Survey (UKIDSS) Galactic
Cluster Survey (GCS). We have extracted over 340 high-probability proper
motion (PM) members down to 0.03 Msolar using a combination
of UKIDSS photometry and PM measurements obtained by cross-correlating
the GCS with data from the Two Micron All Sky Survey, the Isaac Newton
Telescope and the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope. Additionally, we have
unearthed 73 new candidate brown dwarf (BD) members on the basis of
five-band UKIDSS photometry alone. We have identified 23 substellar
multiple system candidates out of 63 candidate BDs from the (Y - K, Y)
and (J - K, J) colour-magnitude diagrams, yielding a binary frequency of
28-44 per cent in the 0.075-0.030 Msolar mass range. Our
estimate is three times larger than the binary fractions reported from
high-resolution imaging surveys of field ultracool dwarfs and Pleiades
BDs. However, it is marginally consistent with our earlier `peculiar'
photometric binary fraction of 50 +/- 10 per cent presented by Pinfield
et al., in good agreement with the 32-45 per cent binary fraction
derived from the recent Monte Carlo simulations of Maxted & Jeffries
and compatible with the 26 +/- 10 per cent frequency recently estimated
by Basri & Reiners. A tentative estimate of the mass ratios from
photometry alone seems to support the hypothesis that binary BDs tend to
reside in near equal-mass ratio systems. In addition, the recovery of
four Pleiades members targeted by high-resolution imaging surveys for
multiplicity studies suggests that half of the binary candidates may
have separations below the resolution limit of the Hubble Space
Telescope or current adaptive optics facilities at the distance of the
Pleiades (a ~7 au). Finally, we have derived luminosity and mass
functions from the sample of photometric candidates with membership
probabilities. The mass function is well modelled by a lognormal peaking
at 0.24Msolar and is in agreement with previous studies in
the Pleiades.
Based on observations made with the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope,
operated by the Joint Astronomy Centre on behalf of the UK Particle
Physics and Astronomy Research Council.
E-mail: nlodieu [at] iac.es (nlodieu[at]iac[dot]es)