SIMBAD references

2010ApJ...708..770Q - Astrophys. J., 708, 770-784 (2010/January-1)

Search for very low-mass brown dwarfs and free-floating planetary-mass objects in Taurus.

QUANZ S.P., GOLDMAN B., HENNING T., BRANDNER W., BURROWS A. and HOFSTETTER L.W.

Abstract (from CDS):

The number of low-mass brown dwarfs and even free floating planetary-mass objects in young nearby star-forming (SF) regions and associations is continuously increasing, offering the possibility to study the low-mass end of the initial mass function in greater detail. In this paper, we present six new candidates for (very) low-mass objects in the Taurus SF region one of which was recently discovered in parallel by Luhman et al. The underlying data we use is part of a new database from a deep near-infrared survey at the Calar Alto observatory. The survey is more than 4 mag deeper than the Two Micron All Sky Survey and covers currently ∼1.5 deg2. Complementary optical photometry from Sloan Digital Sky Survey were available for roughly 1.0 deg2. After selection of the candidates using different color indices, additional photometry from Spitzer/IRAC was included in the analysis. In greater detail, we focus on two very faint objects for which we obtained J-band spectra. Based on comparison with reference spectra, we derive a spectral type of L2±0.5 for one object, making it the object with the latest spectral type in Taurus known today. From models, we find the effective temperature to be 2080±140 K and the mass 5-15 Jupiter masses. For the second source, the J-band spectrum does not provide definite proof of the young, low-mass nature of the object, as the expected steep water vapor absorption at 1.33 µm is not present in the data. We discuss the probability that this object might be a background giant or carbon star. If it were a young Taurus member, however, a comparison to theoretical models suggests that it lies close to or even below the deuterium burning limit (<13 MJup) as well. A first proper motion analysis for both objects shows that they are good candidates for being Taurus members.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): stars: formation - stars: late-type - stars: low-mass, brown dwarfs - stars: pre-main sequence

Nomenclature: Table 5: [QGH2010] CAHA Tau N (Nos 1-6).

Simbad objects: 43

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