Bibcode
Peña Ramírez, K.; Zapatero Osorio, M. R.; Béjar, V. J. S.
Referencia bibliográfica
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 574, id.A118, 9 pp.
Fecha de publicación:
2
2015
Revista
Número de citas
13
Número de citas referidas
13
Descripción
Aims: The detailed study of T-type candidate members of the young
σ Orionis cluster (~3 Myr, ~352 pc, solar metallicity) is
fundamental to properly assess the objects' cluster membership and their
contribution to the definition of the substellar mass function.
Methods: A total of three T-type candidates (S Ori 70, S Ori 73, and S
Ori J053804.65-021352.5) lying in the line of sight towards σ
Orionis were characterized by means of near-infrared photometric,
astrometric, and spectroscopic studies. H-band methane images were
collected for all three sources and an additional sample of 15 field
T-type dwarfs using the LIRIS instrument on the 4.2 m William Herschel
Telescope (WHT). J-band spectra of resolution of ~500 were obtained for
S Ori J053804.65-021352.5 with the ISAAC spectrograph on the 8 m Very
Large Telescope (VLT), and JH spectra of resolution of ~50 acquired with
the Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) on board the Hubble Space Telescope (HST)
were employed for the spectroscopic classification of S Ori 70 and 73.
Accurate proper motions with a typical uncertainty of ±3 mas
yr-1 and a time interval of ~7-9 yr were derived using old
images and new data collected with ISAAC/VLT and WFC3/HST.
Results: Using the LIRIS observations of the field T dwarfs, we
calibrated this imager for T spectral typing via methane photometry. The
three S Ori objects were spectroscopically classified as T4.5 ±
0.5 (S Ori 73), T5 ± 0.5 (S Ori J053804.65-021352.5), and T7
+0.5-1.0 (S Ori 70). These spectral types agree
with the measured H-band methane colors. The similarity between the
observed JH spectra and the methane colors and the data of field
ultra-cool dwarfs of related classifications suggests that S Ori 70, 73,
and S Ori J053804.65-021352.5 do not deviate significantly in surface
gravity in relation to the field. Additionally, the detection of K I at
~1.25 μm in S Ori J053804.65-021352.5 points to a high-gravity
atmosphere. Only the K-band reddish nature of S Ori 70 may be consistent
with a low-gravity atmosphere. The proper motions of S Ori 70 and 73 are
measurable and are larger than that of the cluster by >3.5σ.
The proper motion of S Ori J053804.65-021352.5 is consistent with a null
displacement. These observations suggest that none of the three T dwarfs
is a likely σ Orionis member, and that either planetary-mass
objects with masses below ~4 MJup may not exist free-floating
in the cluster or they may lie at fainter near-infrared magnitudes than
those of the targets (i.e., H > 20.6 mag), thus remaining
unidentified to date. We determined the volume density of field T4-T7
dwarfs to be ≥2.8 ± 1.6 × 10-3
pc-3 from a survey that covered 2798.4 arcmin2 and
was complete up to a distance of 119 pc.
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