Bibcode
Bihain, G.; Rebolo, R.; Béjar, V. J. S.; Caballero, J. A.; Bailer-Jones, C. A. L.; Mundt, R.; Acosta-Pulido, J. A.; Manchado, A.
Referencia bibliográfica
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 458, Issue 3, November II 2006, pp.805-816
Fecha de publicación:
11
2006
Revista
Número de citas
51
Número de citas referidas
46
Descripción
Aims.We present a search for low-mass brown dwarfs in the Pleiades open
cluster. The identification of Pleiades members fainter and cooler than
those currently known allows us to constrain evolutionary models for L
dwarfs and to extend the study of the cluster mass function to lower
masses. Methods: .We conducted a 1.8 deg2 near-infrared
J-band survey at the 3.5 m Calar Alto Telescope, with completeness
J_cpl˜ 19.0. The detected sources were correlated with those of
previously available optical I-band images (I_cpl˜ 22). Using a J
versus I-J colour-magnitude diagram, we identified 18 faint red L-type
candidates, with magnitudes 17.4 3.2.
If Pleiades members, their masses would span
~0.040-0.020~M&sun;. We performed follow-up HK_s-band imaging
to further confirm their cluster membership by photometry and proper
motion. Results: .Out of 11 IJ candidates with proper motion
measurements, we find six cluster members, two non-members and three
whose membership is uncertain and depends on the intrinsic velocity
dispersion of Pleiades brown dwarfs. This dispersion (>4 mas
yr-1) is at least four times that of cluster stars with
masses ⪆1 M&sun;. Five of the seven other IJ candidates
are discarded because their J-Ks colours are bluer than those
of confirmed members. Our least massive proper motion members are
BRB 28 and 29 (~25 M_Jup). The J versus I-J sequence
of the L-type candidates at J>18 is not as red as theoretical models
predict; it rather follows the field L-dwarf sequence translated to the
cluster distance. This sequence overlapping, also observed in the J
versus J-H and J-K diagrams, suggests that Pleiades and field L dwarfs
may have similar spectral energy distributions and luminosities, and
thus possibly similar radii. Also, we find α= 0.5±0.2 for a
power-law approximation dN/dM ∝ M-α of the survey
mass spectrum in the mass range 0.5-0.026~M&sun;. This value
is similar to that of much younger clusters, indicating no significant
differential evaporation of low-mass Pleiades members relative to more
massive ones.