Bibcode
Béjar, V. J. S.; Martín, Eduardo L.
Referencia bibliográfica
Handbook of Exoplanets, ISBN 978-3-319-55332-0. Springer International Publishing AG, part of Springer Nature, 2018, id.92
Fecha de publicación:
2018
Número de citas
1
Número de citas referidas
1
Descripción
Brown dwarfs are substellar objects unable to stably fuse hydrogen in
their interior. Since the discovery of the first brown dwarf in an open
cluster, namely, Teide 1 (Rebolo et al. Nature 377:129-131, 1995), many
searches for substellar objects have been carried out in young stellar
clusters and associations, such as Pleiades, Orion, Upper Scorpius,
Taurus, Chamaeleon, α Persei, Hyades, or Praesepe. The lithium
test has proven to be a very useful tool to distinguish between brown
dwarfs and stars and to determine the ages of young open clusters. Young
substellar objects show spectral features that are sensitive to surface
gravity, which is expected to be lower than in older field counterparts
of similar effective temperature. The studies of the substellar mass
function indicate that brown dwarfs are very numerous, about one-third
of the total number of stars, but their contribution in mass is lower
than 10%. The formation of substellar objects extends below the
deuterium-burning mass limit, which is the realm of the so-called
free-floating or isolated planetary-mass objects that overlap with the
masses of exoplanets.