347 research outputs found
Photometric brown-dwarf classification. II. A homogeneous sample of 1361 L and T dwarfs brighter than J = 17.5 with accurate spectral types
We present a homogeneous sample of 1361 L and T dwarfs brighter than J = 17.5
(of which 998 are new), from an effective area of 3070 deg2, classified by the
photo-type method to an accuracy of one spectral sub-type using izYJHKW1W2
photometry from SDSS+UKIDSS+WISE. Other than a small bias in the early L types,
the sample is shown to be effectively complete to the magnitude limit, for all
spectral types L0 to T8. The nature of the bias is an incompleteness estimated
at 3% because peculiar blue L dwarfs of type L4 and earlier are classified late
M. There is a corresponding overcompleteness because peculiar red (likely
young) late M dwarfs are classified early L. Contamination of the sample is
confirmed to be small: so far spectroscopy has been obtained for 19 sources in
the catalogue and all are confirmed to be ultracool dwarfs. We provide
coordinates and izYJHKW1W2 photometry of all sources. We identify an apparent
discontinuity, m 0.4 mag., in the Y-K colour between spectral
types L7 and L8. We present near-infrared spectra of nine sources identified by
photo-type as peculiar, including a new low-gravity source ULAS
J005505.68+013436.0, with spectroscopic classification L2{}. We provide
revised izYJHKW1W2 template colours for late M dwarfs, types M7 to M9.Comment: Accepted for publication in A & A, 17 pages, 14 figures, catalogue of
L and T dwarfs supplied here in source files (anc/ directory), and available
on CD
Discovery of a Companion at the L/T Transition with the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer
We report the discovery of a substellar companion to the nearby solar-type
star HD 46588 (F7V, 17.9 pc, ~3 Gyr). HD 46588 B was found through a survey for
common proper motion companions to nearby stars using data from the Wide-field
Infrared Survey Explorer and the Two-Micron All-Sky Survey. It has an angular
separation of 79.2" from its primary, which corresponds to a projected physical
separation of 1420 AU. We have measured a spectral type of L9 for this object
based on near-infrared spectroscopy performed with TripleSpec at Palomar
Observatory. We estimate a mass of 0.064+0.008/-0.019 Msun from a comparison of
its luminosity to the values predicted by theoretical evolutionary models for
the age of the primary. Because of its companionship to a well-studied star, HD
46588 B is one of the few known brown dwarfs at the L/T transition for which
both age and distance estimates are available. Thus, it offers new constraints
on the properties of brown dwarfs during this brief evolutionary phase. The
discovery of HD 46588 B also illustrates the value of the Wide-field Infrared
Survey Explorer for identifying brown dwarfs in the solar neighborhood via
their proper motions.Comment: Astrophysical Journal, in pres
Searching for Exosatellites Orbiting L and T Dwarfs: Connecting Planet Formation to Moon Formation and Finding New Temperate Worlds
L-type and T-type dwarfs span the boundaries between main-sequence stars,
brown dwarfs, and planetary-mass objects. For these reasons, L and T dwarfs are
the perfect laboratories for exploring the relationship between planet
formation and moon formation, and evidence suggests they may be swarming with
close-in rocky satellites, though none have been found to date. The discovery
of satellites orbiting L or T dwarfs will have transformative implications for
the nature of planets, moons and even life in the Universe. These transiting
satellites will be prime targets for characterization with NASA's James Webb
Space Telescope. In this white paper, we discuss the scientific motivations
behind searching for transiting satellites orbiting L and T dwarfs and argue
that robotizing current 1-to-2-meter US optical/infrared (O/IR) facilities and
equipping them with recently developed low-cost infrared imagers will enable
these discoveries in the next decade. Furthermore, robotizing the 1-to-2-meter
O/IR fleet is highly synergistic with rapid follow-up of transient and
multi-messenger events.Comment: Science white paper submitted to the Astro 2020 Decadal Survey on
Astronomy and Astrophysic
Parental Involvement Among Collegiate Student-Athletes: An Analysis Across NCAA Divisions
Despite emerging evidence of a link between parental involvement and student-athletes’ (SA) experiences, and the desire for educational programming for parents of these SAs, previous research has been limited to the Division I level. This has prevented the ability to inform, develop, and deliver parent programming across the NCAA’s diverse membership. The present study was designed to descriptively assess SA reports of parental involvement (i.e., support, contact, academic engagement, athletic engagement) across NCAA Division I, II, and III member institutions and examine the potential impact of this involvement on SAs’ experiences (i.e., academic self-efficacy, athletic satisfaction, well-being, individuation). Participants were 455 SAs (53% female; 81% Caucasian; Mage = 19.81, SD = 1.65) from DI (30%), DII (37%), and DIII (33%) institutions, who completed an online survey with items assessing parental involvement and SA experiences. Regarding academic classification, 32% were freshmen, 24% sophomores, 22% juniors, and 22% seniors. Results provide novel evidence for an absence of division-wide differences in average levels of involvement and no variability in links between involvement and SA experiences across divisions. Results complement and extend previous research by offering a clearer understanding of differential associations between involvement and SAs’ experiences regardless of division, notably that involvement bolstered well-being but also strongly detracted from individuation. Findings highlight the importance of developing programs to promote positive and developmentally-appropriate parental involvement across the spectrum of intercollegiate athletics, especially given the absence of evidence-based resources presently offered by the NCAA
A new L-dwarf member of the moderately metal-poor triple system HD 221356
We report on the discovery of a fourth component in the HD 221356 star
system, previously known to be formed by an F8V, slightly metal-poor primary
([Fe/H]=-0.26), and a distant M8V+L3V pair. In our ongoing common proper motion
search based on VISTA Hemisphere Survey (VHS) and 2MASS catalogues, we have
detected a faint (J=13.76+/-0.04 mag) co-moving companion of the F8 star
located at angular separation of 12.13+/-0.18 arcsec (position angle of
221.8+/-1.7), corresponding to a projected distance of ~312 AU at 26 pc.
Near-infrared spectroscopy of the new companion, covering the 1.5-2.4 micron
wavelength range with a resolving power of R~600, indicates an L1+/-1 spectral
type. Using evolutionary models the mass of the new companion is estimated at
~0.08 solar masses, which places the object close to the stellar-substellar
borderline. This multiple system provides an interesting example of objects
with masses slightly above and below the hydrogen burning mass limit. The low
mass companions of HD 221356 have slightly bluer colours than field dwarfs with
similar spectral type, which is likely a consequence of the sub-solar
metallicity of the system.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
A focus on L dwarfs with trigonometric parallaxes
This is an author-created, un-copyedited version of an article published in Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific. Under embargo until 14 May 2019. IOP Publishing Ltd is not responsible for any errors or omissions in this version of the manuscript or any version derived from it. The Version of Record is available online at https://doi.org/10.1088/1538-3873/aaacc5.We report new parallax measurements for ten L and early T type dwarfs, five of which have no previous published values, using observations over 3 years at the robotic Liverpool Telescope. The resulting parallaxes and proper motions have median errors of 2\,mas and 1.5\,mas/year respectively. Their space motions indicate they are all Galactic disk members. We combined this sample with other objects with astrometry from the Liverpool Telescope and with published literature astrometry to construct a sample of 260 L and early T type dwarfs with measured parallaxes, designated the Astrometry Sample. We study the kinematics of the Astrometry Sample, and derived a solar motion of \,\kms~ with respect to the local standard of rest, in agreement with recent literature. We derive a kinematic age of 1.5-1.7\,Gyr for the Astrometry Sample assuming the age increases monotonically with the total velocity for a given disk sample. This kinematic age is less than half literature values for other low mass dwarf samples. We believe this difference arises for two reasons (1) the sample is mainly composed of mid to late L dwarfs which are expected to be relatively young and (2) the requirement that objects have a measured parallax biases the sample to the brighter examples which tend to be younger.Peer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio
The High-Order-Multiplicity of Unusually Wide M-dwarf Binaries: Eleven New Triple and Quadruple Systems
M-dwarfs in extremely wide binary systems are very rare, and may thus have
different formation processes from those found as single stars or close
binaries in the field. In this paper we search for close companions to a new
sample of 36 extremely wide M-dwarf binaries, covering a spectral type range of
M1 to M5 and a separation range of 600 - 6500 AU. We discover 10 new triple
systems and one new quadruple system. We carefully account for selection
effects including proper motion, magnitude limits, the detection of close
binaries in the SDSS, and other sample biases. The bias-corrected total
high-order-multiple fraction is 45% (+18%/-16%) and the bias-corrected
incidence of quadruple systems is < 5%, both statistically compatible with that
found for the more common close M-dwarf multiple systems. Almost all the
detected companions have similar masses to their primaries, although two very
low mass companions, including a candidate brown dwarf, are found at relatively
large separations. We find that the close-binary separation distribution is
strongly peaked towards < 30AU separations. There is marginally significant
evidence for a change in high-order M-dwarf multiplicity with binding energy
and total mass. We also find 2-sigma evidence of an unexpected increased
high-order-multiple fraction for the widest targets in our survey, with a
high-order-multiple fraction of 21% (+17%/-7%) for systems with separations up
to 2000AU, compared to 77% (+9%/-22%) for systems with separations > 4000AU.
These results suggest that the very widest M-dwarf binary systems need higher
masses to form or to survive.Comment: 11 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
A deep WISE search for very late type objects and the discovery of two halo/thick-disc T dwarfs : WISE 0013+0634 and WISE 0833+0052
This article has been accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society ©: 2013 The Authors. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. All rights reservedA method is defined for identifying late-T and Y dwarfs in WISE down to low values of signal-to-noise. This requires a WISE detection only in the W2-band and uses the statistical properties of the WISE multiframe measurements and profile fit photometry to reject contamination resulting from non-point-like objects, variables and moving sources. To trace our desired parameter space, we use a control sample of isolated non-moving non-variable point sources from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), and identify a sample of 158 WISE W2-only candidates down to a signal-to-noise limit of eight. For signal-to-noise ranges >10 and 8-10, respectively, similar to 45 and similar to 90 per cent of our sample fall outside the selection criteria published by the WISE team, mainly due to the type of constraints placed on the number of individual W2 detections. We present follow-up of eight candidates and identify WISE 0013+0634 and WISE 0833+0052, T8 and T9 dwarfs with high proper motion (similar to 1.3 and similar to 1.8 arcsec yr(-1)). Both objects show a mid-infrared/near-infrared excess of similar to 1-1.5 mag and are K band suppressed. Distance estimates lead to space motion constraints that suggest halo (or at least thick disc) kinematics. We then assess the reduced proper motion diagram of WISE ultracool dwarfs, which suggests that late-T and Y dwarfs may have a higher thick-disc/halo population fraction than earlier objects.Peer reviewe
Interactions between brown-dwarf binaries and Sun-like stars
Several mechanisms have been proposed for the formation of brown dwarfs, but
there is as yet no consensus as to which -- if any -- are operative in nature.
Any theory of brown dwarf formation must explain the observed statistics of
brown dwarfs. These statistics are limited by selection effects, but they are
becoming increasingly discriminating. In particular, it appears (a) that brown
dwarfs that are secondaries to Sun-like stars tend to be on wide orbits, a\ga
100\,{\rm AU} (the Brown Dwarf Desert), and (b) that these brown dwarfs have a
significantly higher chance of being in a close (a\la 10\,{\rm AU}) binary
system with another brown dwarf than do brown dwarfs in the field. This then
raises the issue of whether these brown dwarfs have formed {\it in situ}, i.e.
by fragmentation of a circumstellar disc; or have formed elsewhere and
subsequently been captured. We present numerical simulations of the purely
gravitational interaction between a close brown-dwarf binary and a Sun-like
star. These simulations demonstrate that such interactions have a negligible
chance () of leading to the close brown-dwarf binary being captured by
the Sun-like star. Making the interactions dissipative by invoking the
hydrodynamic effects of attendant discs might alter this conclusion. However,
in order to explain the above statistics, this dissipation would have to favour
the capture of brown-dwarf binaries over single brown-dwarfs, and we present
arguments why this is unlikely. The simplest inference is that most brown-dwarf
binaries -- and therefore possibly also most single brown dwarfs -- form by
fragmentation of circumstellar discs around Sun-like protostars, with some of
them subsequently being ejected into the field.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, Accepted for publication in Astrophysics and
Space Scienc
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