Bibcode
Zapatero Osorio, M. R.; Rebolo, R.; Martin, E. L.; Basri, G.; Magazzu, A.; Hodgkin, S. T.; Cossburn, M. R.; Jameson, R. F.
Bibliographical reference
ASP Conf. Ser. 154, The Tenth Cambridge Workshop on Cool Stars, Stellar Systems and the Sun, Edited by R. A. Donahue and J. A. Bookbinder, p.1912
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0
1998
Citations
2
Refereed citations
1
Description
We have discovered a relatively large number of brown dwarf candidates
in the Pleiades young open cluster as a result of a deep CCD IZ survey
covering 1 deg^2 down to limiting magnitudes I ~22 and Z ~21. Follow-up
infrared photometry and low/intermediate-resolution spectroscopy of
seven of our candidates in the interval 20 > I > 17.8 allow us to
investigate their membership in the Pleiades. The observed spectra show
that these objects are very cool dwarfs (M6-M9). Five of them can be
considered as cluster members on the basis of their spectroscopic and
photometric properties. Given their low luminosity and according to
current evolutionary models, we estimate their masses to range from
roughly 80 M_Jup for the hottest object, down to 45 M_Jup for Roque 4,
the coolest and faintest confirmed member. We observe some differences
in the spectra of our least massive Pleiades brown dwarfs in comparison
to field stars of very late spectral types and similar effective
temperatures. They may be related to gravity effects and the presence of
dust in the atmospheres. The brown dwarfs discovered in the Pleiades
prove that the process of fragmentation of clouds extend well into the
substellar realm, suggesting a rise in the inital mass function below
the star-BD boundary.