1,348 research outputs found
Constraints to the Masses of Brown Dwarf Candidates from the Lithium Test
We present intermediate dispersion (0.7-2.2 \AA ~pix) optical
spectroscopic observations aimed at applying the ``Lithium Test'' to a sample
of ten brown dwarf candidates located in the general field, two in young open
clusters, and two in close binaries. We find evidence for strong Li depletion
in all of them, and thus infer lower mass limits of 0.065~M, depending
only slightly (0.005~M) on the interior models. None of the field
brown dwarf candidates in our sample appears to be a very young (age
~10~yr) substellar object. For one of the faintest proper motion
Pleiades members known (V=20.7) the Li test implies a mass greater than
0.08~M, and therefore it is not a brown dwarf. From our spectra
we estimate spectral types for some objects and present measurements of Halpha
emission strengths and radial velocities. Finally, we compare the positions in
the H-R diagram of our sample of brown dwarf candidates with the theoretical
region where Li is expected to be preserved (Substellar Lithium Region). We
find that certain combinations of temperature calibrations and evolutionary
tracks are consistent with the constraints imposed by the observed Li depletion
in brown dwarf candidates, while others are not.Comment: 20 pp.; 4 figs, available under request; plain LaTeX, ApJ in press,
OACatania-94-00
A search for lithium in metal-poor L dwarfs
The aim of the project is to search for lithium in absorption at 6707.8
Angstroms to constrain the nature and the mass of the brightest low-metallicity
L-type dwarfs (refered to as L subdwarfs) identified in large-scale surveys.
We obtained low- to intermediate-resolution (R~2500-9000) optical (~560-770
nm) spectra of two mid-L subdwarfs, SDSSJ125637.13-022452.4 (SDSS1256; sdL3.5)
and 2MASSJ162620.14+392519.5 (2MASS1626; sdL4) with spectrographs on the
European Southern Observatory Very Large Telescope and the Gran Telescopio de
Canarias.
We report the presence of a feature at the nominal position of the lithium
absorption doublet at 6707.8 Angstroms in the spectrum of SDSS1256, with an
equivalent width of 66+/-27 Angstroms at 2.4 sigma, which we identify as
arising from a CaH molecular transition based on atmosphere models. We do not
see any feature at the position of the lithium feature in the spectrum of
2MASS1626. The existence of overlapping molecular absorption sets a confusion
detection limit of [Li/H]=-3 for equivalently-typed L subdwarfs. We provided
improved radial velocity measurements of -126+/-10 km/s and -239+/-12 km/s for
SDSS1256 and 2MASS1626, respectively, as well as revised Galactic orbits. We
implemented adjusting factors for the CaH molecule in combination with the
NextGen atmosphere models to fit the optical spectrum of SDSS1256 in the
6200-7300 Angstroms range. We also estimate the expected Li abundance from
interstellar accretion ([Li/H]=-5), place limits on circumstellar accretion
(10^9 g/yr), and discuss the prospects of Li searches in cooler L and T
subdwarfs.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, 4 tables, accepted to A&
Detection of Anomalous Microwave Emission in the Pleiades Reflection Nebula with WMAP and the COSMOSOMAS Experiment
We present evidence for anomalous microwave emission (AME) in the Pleiades
reflection nebula, using data from the seven-year release of the Wilkinson
Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) and from the COSMOSOMAS experiment. The flux
integrated in a 1-degree radius around R.A.=56.24^{\circ}, Dec.=23.78^{\circ}
(J2000) is 2.15 +/- 0.12 Jy at 22.8 GHz, where AME is dominant. COSMOSOMAS data
show no significant emission, but allow to set upper limits of 0.94 and 1.58 Jy
(99.7% C.L.) respectively at 10.9 and 14.7 GHz, which are crucial to pin down
the AME spectrum at these frequencies, and to discard any other emission
mechanisms which could have an important contribution to the signal detected at
22.8 GHz. We estimate the expected level of free-free emission from an
extinction-corrected H-alpha template, while the thermal dust emission is
characterized from infrared DIRBE data and extrapolated to microwave
frequencies. When we deduct the contribution from these two components at 22.8
GHz the residual flux, associated with AME, is 2.12 +/- 0.12 Jy (17.7-sigma).
The spectral energy distribution from 10 to 60 GHz can be accurately fitted
with a model of electric dipole emission from small spinning dust grains
distributed in two separated phases of molecular and atomic gas, respectively.
The dust emissivity, calculated by correlating the 22.8 GHz data with
100-micron data, is found to be 4.36+/-0.17 muK/MJy/sr, a value that is rather
low compared with typical values in dust clouds. The physical properties of the
Pleiades nebula indicate that this is indeed a much less opaque object than
others were AME has usually been detected. This fact, together with the broad
knowledge of the stellar content of this region, provides an excellent testbed
for AME characterization in physical conditions different from those generally
explored up to now.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. 12 pages, 8 figure
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