Bibcode
DOI
Martín, E. L.; Brandner, W.; Bouvier, J.; Luhman, K. L.; Stauffer, J.; Basri, G.; Zapatero Osorio, M. R.; Barrado y Navascués, D.
Referencia bibliográfica
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 543, Issue 1, pp. 299-312.
Fecha de publicación:
11
2000
Revista
Número de citas
133
Número de citas referidas
113
Descripción
We present near-infrared photometry and optical spectroscopy of very low
mass stars and brown dwarf candidates in the Pleiades open cluster. The
membership status of these objects is assessed using color-magnitude
diagrams, lithium and spectral types. Eight objects out of 45 appear to
be nonmembers. A search for companions among 34 very low mass Pleiades
members (M<=0.09 Msolar) in high spatial resolution images
obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) and the adaptive optics
system of the Canada-France-Hawaii telescope produced no resolved
binaries with separations larger than 0.2" (a~27 AU P~444 yr).
Nevertheless, we find evidence for a binary sequence in the
color-magnitude diagrams, in agreement with the results of Steele &
Jameson for higher mass stars. We apply the lithium test to two objects:
CFHT-Pl-16, which lies in the cluster binary sequence but is unresolved
in images obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope; and CFHT-Pl-18,
which is binary with 0.33" separation. The first object passes the test,
but the second object does not. We conclude that CFHT-Pl-16 is an
Pleiades brown dwarf binary with separation less than 11 AU and that
CFHT-Pl-18 is a foreground system. We compare the multiplicity
statistics of the Pleiades very low mass stars and brown dwarfs with
that of G- and K-type main-sequence stars in the solar neighborhood. We
find that there is some evidence for a deficiency of wide binary systems
(separation >27 AU) among the Pleiades very low mass members. We
briefly discuss how this result can fit with current scenarios of brown
dwarf formation. We correct the Pleiades substellar mass function for
the contamination of cluster nonmembers found in this work. We find a
contamination level of 33% among the brown dwarf candidates identified
by Bouvier et al. Assuming a power-law IMF across the substellar
boundary, we find a slope dN/dM~M-0.53, implying that the
number of objects per mass bin is still rising but the contribution to
the total mass of the cluster is declining in the brown dwarf regime.
Based in part on observations made with the NASA/ESA Hubble Space
Telescope, obtained at the Space Telescope Science Institute, which is
operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy,
Inc., under NASA contract NAS 5-26555. These observations are associated
with proposal ID 7952.