We report the discovery of a population of young brown dwarf candidates in
the open star cluster IC348 and the development of a new spectroscopic
classification technique using narrow band photometry. Observations were made
using FLITECAM, the First Light Camera for SOFIA, at the 3-m Shane Telescope at
Lick Observatory. FLITECAM is a new 1-5 micron camera with an 8 arcmin field of
view. Custom narrow band filters were developed to detect absorption features
of water vapor (at 1.495 microns) and methane (at 1.66 microns) characteristic
of brown dwarfs. These filters enable spectral classification of stars and
brown dwarfs without spectroscopy. FLITECAM's narrow and broadband photometry
was verified by examining the color-color and color-magnitude characteristics
of stars whose spectral type and reddening was known from previous surveys.
Using our narrow band filter photometry method, it was possible to identify an
object measured with a signal-to-noise ratio of 20 or better to within +/-3
spectral class subtypes for late-type stars. With this technique, very deep
images of the central region of IC348 (H ~ 20.0) have identified 18 sources as
possible L or T dwarf candidates. Out of these 18, we expect that between 3 - 6
of these objects are statistically likely to be background stars, with the
remainder being true low-mass members of the cluster. If confirmed as cluster
members then these are very low-mass objects (~5 Mjupiter). We also describe
how two additional narrow band filters can improve the contrast between M, L,
and T dwarfs as well as provide a means to determine the reddening of an
individual object.Comment: 43 pages, 17 figures. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journal 27 June 200