Metal-rich T-dwarfs in the Hyades cluster

Similar documents
b-chromatic number of cacti

Optically Selected GRB Afterglows, a Real Time Analysis System at the CFHT

Smart Bolometer: Toward Monolithic Bolometer with Smart Functions

Easter bracelets for years

Case report on the article Water nanoelectrolysis: A simple model, Journal of Applied Physics (2017) 122,

Methylation-associated PHOX2B gene silencing is a rare event in human neuroblastoma.

On size, radius and minimum degree

A new simple recursive algorithm for finding prime numbers using Rosser s theorem

Exploring the substellar IMF in the Taurus cloud

arxiv: v1 [astro-ph.sr] 3 Nov 2010

Near-Earth Asteroids Orbit Propagation with Gaia Observations

Can we reduce health inequalities? An analysis of the English strategy ( )

Thomas Lugand. To cite this version: HAL Id: tel

Young open clusters in the Milky Way and Small Magellanic Cloud

L institution sportive : rêve et illusion

Passerelle entre les arts : la sculpture sonore

Gaia astrometric accuracy in the past

The lower mass function of the young open cluster Blanco 1: from 30 Mjup to 3 Mo

New stellar members of the Coma Berenices open star cluster

Towards an active anechoic room

On the longest path in a recursively partitionable graph

Vibro-acoustic simulation of a car window

Evolution of the cooperation and consequences of a decrease in plant diversity on the root symbiont diversity

Soundness of the System of Semantic Trees for Classical Logic based on Fitting and Smullyan

The CO-H2 conversion factor of diffuse ISM: Bright 12CO emission also traces diffuse gas

A study of the young open cluster Collinder 359

What can Simbol-X do for gamma-ray binaries?

Completeness of the Tree System for Propositional Classical Logic

The lower mass function of the young open cluster Blanco 1: from 30 M Jup to 3 M ABSTRACT

Analysis of Boyer and Moore s MJRTY algorithm

Electromagnetic characterization of magnetic steel alloys with respect to the temperature

Cutwidth and degeneracy of graphs

From Unstructured 3D Point Clouds to Structured Knowledge - A Semantics Approach

A high-contrast adaptiveoptics imaging search for brown dwarfs

Comparison of Harmonic, Geometric and Arithmetic means for change detection in SAR time series

Dispersion relation results for VCS at JLab

The FLRW cosmological model revisited: relation of the local time with th e local curvature and consequences on the Heisenberg uncertainty principle

Prompt Photon Production in p-a Collisions at LHC and the Extraction of Gluon Shadowing

Theoretical calculation of the power of wind turbine or tidal turbine

A new approach of the concept of prime number

A Study of the Regular Pentagon with a Classic Geometric Approach

Influence of a Rough Thin Layer on the Potential

Full-order observers for linear systems with unknown inputs

Structural study of a rare earth-rich aluminoborosilicate glass containing various alkali and alkaline-earth modifier cations

SOLAR RADIATION ESTIMATION AND PREDICTION USING MEASURED AND PREDICTED AEROSOL OPTICAL DEPTH

Particle-in-cell simulations of high energy electron production by intense laser pulses in underdense plasmas

Radio-detection of UHECR by the CODALEMA experiment

A remark on a theorem of A. E. Ingham.

Simultaneous Induction Heating and Electromagnetic Stirring of a Molten Glass Bath

The Learner s Dictionary and the Sciences:

Multiple sensor fault detection in heat exchanger system

On Symmetric Norm Inequalities And Hermitian Block-Matrices

A note on the acyclic 3-choosability of some planar graphs

Lorentz force velocimetry using small-size permanent magnet systems and a multi-degree-of-freedom force/torque sensor

On Newton-Raphson iteration for multiplicative inverses modulo prime powers

Improving the Jet Reconstruction with the Particle Flow Method; an Introduction

A note on the computation of the fraction of smallest denominator in between two irreducible fractions

1.0 L53 1. INTRODUCTION 2. AN ADAPTIVE OPTICS SURVEY OF NEARBY M8 M9 FIELD STARS. The Astrophysical Journal, 567:L53 L57, 2002 March 1

A brown dwarf candidate in the Praesepe Open Cluster

Computer Visualization of the Riemann Zeta Function

Comment on: Sadi Carnot on Carnot s theorem.

The influence of the global atmospheric properties on the detection of UHECR by EUSO on board of the ISS

Solution to Sylvester equation associated to linear descriptor systems

Ion energy balance during fast wave heating in TORE SUPRA

Exogenous input estimation in Electronic Power Steering (EPS) systems

Computation and Experimental Measurements of the Magnetic Fields between Filamentary Circular Coils

Entropies and fractal dimensions

Water Vapour Effects in Mass Measurement

Numerical Modeling of Eddy Current Nondestructive Evaluation of Ferromagnetic Tubes via an Integral. Equation Approach

Determination of absorption characteristic of materials on basis of sound intensity measurement

Impulse response measurement of ultrasonic transducers

STATISTICAL ENERGY ANALYSIS: CORRELATION BETWEEN DIFFUSE FIELD AND ENERGY EQUIPARTITION

3D-CE5.h: Merge candidate list for disparity compensated prediction

A Slice Based 3-D Schur-Cohn Stability Criterion

Constraint on brown dwarf formation: radial variation of the stellar and sub- stellar mass function of IC 2391 ( and mass function of Praesepe)

A non-commutative algorithm for multiplying (7 7) matrices using 250 multiplications

Quantum efficiency and metastable lifetime measurements in ruby ( Cr 3+ : Al2O3) via lock-in rate-window photothermal radiometry

IMPROVEMENTS OF THE VARIABLE THERMAL RESISTANCE

Widely Linear Estimation with Complex Data

Comments on the method of harmonic balance

Hook lengths and shifted parts of partitions

The Pan-STARRS1 view of the Hyades cluster

New Basis Points of Geodetic Stations for Landslide Monitoring

Diurnal variation of tropospheric temperature at a tropical station

On the Earth s magnetic field and the Hall effect

LAWS OF CRYSTAL-FIELD DISORDERNESS OF Ln3+ IONS IN INSULATING LASER CRYSTALS

A Simple Proof of P versus NP

A Simple Model for Cavitation with Non-condensable Gases

A non-linear simulator written in C for orbital spacecraft rendezvous applications.

Learning an Adaptive Dictionary Structure for Efficient Image Sparse Coding

Control of an offshore wind turbine modeled as discrete system

Analysis of Astrometry and Photometry Observations of Asteroids at the RTT150

There are infinitely many twin primes 30n+11 and 30n+13, 30n+17 and 30n+19, 30n+29 and 30n+31

The Riemann Hypothesis Proof And The Quadrivium Theory

RHEOLOGICAL INTERPRETATION OF RAYLEIGH DAMPING

All Associated Stirling Numbers are Arithmetical Triangles

The magnetic field diffusion equation including dynamic, hysteresis: A linear formulation of the problem

Numerical Exploration of the Compacted Associated Stirling Numbers

An Adaptive Optics Survey of M8-M9 stars: Discovery of 4 Very Low Mass Binaries With at Least One System Containing a Brown Dwarf Companion

The beam-gas method for luminosity measurement at LHCb

Transcription:

Metal-rich T-dwarfs in the Hyades cluster Jerome Bouvier, Tim Kendall, Gwendolyn Meeus To cite this version: Jerome Bouvier, Tim Kendall, Gwendolyn Meeus. Metal-rich T-dwarfs in the Hyades cluster. Cool Stars 15, Jul 2008, United Kingdom. <hal-00330643> HAL Id: hal-00330643 https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00330643 Submitted on 15 Oct 2008 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access archive for the deposit and dissemination of scientific research documents, whether they are published or not. The documents may come from teaching and research institutions in France or abroad, or from public or private research centers. L archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, émanant des établissements d enseignement et de recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires publics ou privés.

Metal-rich T-dwarfs in the Hyades cluster J. Bouvier, T. Kendall and G. Meeus Laboratoire d Astrophysique, Observatoire de Grenoble, Université J. Fourier, CNRS, France Centre for Astrophysics Research, Univ. Hertfordshire, College Lane, Hatfield AL10 9AB, UK Astrophysikalisches Institut Potsdam, An der Sternwarte 16, D-14482 Potsdam, Germany Abstract. We present the results of a search for brown dwarfs (BDs) and very low mass (VLM) stars in the 625 Myr-old, metal-rich ([Fe/H]=0.14) Hyades cluster. We performed a deep (I=23, z=22.5) photometric survey over 16 deg 2 around the cluster center. We report the discovery of the first 2 BDs in the Hyades cluster, with a spectral type T1 and T2, respectively. Their optical and near-ir photometry, as well as their proper motion, are consistent with them being cluster members. According to models, their mass is about 50 Jupiter masses at an age of 625 Myr. We also report the discovery of 3 new very low mass stellar members and confirm the membership of 15 others. THE HYADES CLUSTER The Hyades (Melotte 25, α 2000 =04 h 26 m 54 s, δ 2000 =+15 o 52 ; l=180.05 o, b=-22.40 o ) is one of the richest open clusters and the closest to the Sun. Perryman et al. (2008) derived its main structural and kinematical properties based on Hipparcos measurements : a distance of 46.3±0.27 pc, an age of 625±50 Myr, a metallicity [Fe/H] of 0.14±0.05, a present-day total mass of about 400 M, a tidal radius of 10.3 pc, a core radius of 2.5-3.0 pc and negligible extinction on the line of sight. The large proper motion of the cluster (µ 100 mas yr 1 ) can easily be measured from imaging surveys over a timeframe of only a few years, which helps in assessing cluster s membership. THE CFHT SURVEY Wide-field optical images were obtained in the I and z bands with the CFHT 12K camera, a mosaic of 12 CCD arrays with a pixel size of 0.21 which provides a FOV of 42 28. The survey consists of 53 mosaic fields covering a total of 16 square degrees. It extends symmetrically around the cluster s center, along a 4 deg-wide stripe of constant galactic latitude, and up to 3 degrees away from the cluster center in galactic longitude. The survey is at least 90% complete down to I 23.0 and z 22.5, a limit which varies only slightly with seeing conditions (0.6-0.8 arcsec).

NextGen NextGen Dusty Cond Cond Dusty FIGURE 1. Left : (I, I-z) and (I, I-K) CMDs of optically selected candidated followed up with CFHT IR in the K-band. Small dots : 17 optically selected candidates without follow up IR photometry. Large dots : optically selected candidates whose proper motion is inconsistent with Hyades membership (cf. right panel). Triangles : candidates whose proper motion is consistent with Hyades membership. The stellar/substellar boundary occurs at I 17.8 mag. The 2 most promising substellar cluster candidates are shown by large triangles. NextGen (0.07-0.3 M ), Dusty (0.04-0.07 M ), and Cond (0.015-0.05 M ) 600 Myr isochrones are shown and labelled with mass (Baraffe et al. 1998; Chabrier et al. 2000). In the (I, I-K) CMD, the dotted line indicates the locus of M8-T5 field dwarfs (from Dahn et al. 2002). The rms photometric error is shown as bars. Right : Proper motion vector diagram for 107 optically selected candidates followed up in the K-band (see text). The expected proper motion for Hyades members is shown by the (red) box (Bryja et al. 2004). Within these boundaries, 23 optically selected candidates (empty circles) are found to share the proper motion of the cluster, including 2 BDs (large triangles). Typical rms errors on the ppm measurements are shown by a cross. CANDIDATE MEMBER SELECTION PSF photometry was performed on the I and z-band images with a modified version of SExtractor (Bertin & Arnouts 1996) from a PSF model computed with the PSFEx software. The (I, I-z) color magnitude diagram (CMD) is shown in Fig 1. A total of 125 possible Hyades members were selected in this CMD from their location relative to model isochrones. Follow up K-band imaging was obtained for 108 of the 125 optically selected candidate members using the 1k 1k CFHT IR camera. The (I, I-K) CMD for the 108 candidates followed up in the K-band is shown in Fig 1. In addition, the proper motion of optically selected Hyades candidates was computed from pairs of optical (I, z) and infrared (K) images obtained 2 or 3 years apart. The proper motion vector diagram of 107 optically selected Hyades candidate members is shown in Figure 1.

TABLE 1. The lowest mass Hyades members : photometry and proper motion. CFHT-Hy-# RA(2000) Dec(2000) I I-z I-K µ α cosδ µ δ Mass (mas.yr 1 ) (M ) CFHT-Hy-19 4 17 24.8 16 34 36 17.49 1.18 4.59 99-28 0.08 CFHT-Hy-20 4 30 38.7 13 09 57 21.58 1.79 5.50 135-9 0.05 CFHT-Hy-21 4 29 22.7 15 35 29 22.16 1.36 5.57 79-18 0.05 FIGURE 2. Near-infrared Amici low resolution spectra of CFHT-Hy-19, 20 and 21 (solid lines from top to bottom). In each panel we also show the closest matching field dwarf spectrum (dotted line) from the low resolution Amici spectral library (Testi et al. 2001; Testi 2004). BROWN DWARFS IN THE HYADES CLUSTER Based on photometry and astrometry, we eventually identified 20 candidates which consistently qualify as probable Hyades members on the basis of their optical photometry, (I-K) color and proper motion. Of these, 15 were already listed as possible or probable Hyades members in Prosser & Stauffer s Open Cluster Database. The remaining 5 probable members we report here are new. They include 3 low mass stars ( 0.14 M ) and 2 objects well within the substellar regime ( 0.050 M ). Our survey thus identifies the first 2 Hyades BD candidates (CFHT-Hy-20, 21) as well as a previously detected very low mass star (CFHT-Hy-19) close to the stellar-substellar boundary, that had originally been considered as a non-member by Gizis et al. (1999).

The properties of these lowest mass members are listed in Table 1. The 2 BDs are well within the substellar domain with an estimated mass of about 50 Jupiter masses while the lowest mass star has an estimated mass around 0.08 M. Low resolution infrared spectra were obtained for these 3 objects using TNG/NICS and are shown in Figure 2. Fitting the observed spectra with those of template field dwarfs observed with the same instrument, we derive a spectral type of M8, T2 and T1 for CFHT-Hy-19, 20 and 21, respectively. The 2 T-dwarfs we report here are strong candidate Hyades members based on their consistent photometry and proper motion. Nevertheless, we proceed in estimating the probability that they could be unrelated field T dwarfs projected onto the Hyades cluster. From the combination of the 2MASS and SDSS DR1 surveys, Metchev et al. (2008) derived an upper limit of 0.9 10 3 pc 3 on the space density of T0-T2.5 dwarfs in the solar neighborhood. Combining the area of our survey with the range of distances for possible field contaminants, the corresponding volume is 65 pc 3. We thus expect 0.06 early field T dwarf to contaminate our survey. This estimate further strengthens the likelihood that the 2 candidates we report here are indeed the first BDs and the lowest mass members of the Hyades cluster known to date. CONCLUSION Our survey is complete in the mass range from less than 50 Jupiter masses up to 0.20 M. In this mass range, we identified 18 very low mass stars, down to the stellar-substellar limit, as well as 2 brown dwarfs with a spectral type T1 and T2. These are the first T- dwarfs identified in the Hyades cluster at an age of 625 Myr, and also the only known instances of metal-rich ([Fe/H]=0.14) methane dwarfs. A full account of these results is given in Bouvier et al. (2008) 1. Additional spectroscopy is planned on Gemini during the fall of 2008 in order to investigate the spectral characteristics of metal-rich T-dwarfs in more detail and confront them with model predictions. REFERENCES 1. Baraffe, I., Chabrier, G., Allard, F., & Hauschildt, P. H. 1998, A&A, 337, 403 2. Bertin, E., & Arnouts, S. 1996, A&AS, 117, 393 3. Bouvier, J., et al. 2008, A&A, 481, 661 4. Bryja, C., Humphreys, R. M., & Jones, T. J. 1994, AJ, 107, 246 5. Chabrier, G., Baraffe, I., Allard, F., & Hauschildt, P. 2000, ApJ, 542, 464 6. Dahn, C. C., et al. 2002, AJ, 124, 1170 7. Dobbie, P. D., Kenyon, F., Jameson, R. F., et al. 2002, MNRAS, 329, 543 8. Gizis, J. E., Reid, I. N., & Monet, D. G. 1999, AJ, 118, 997 9. Hogan, E., Jameson, R. F., Casewell, S. L., et al. 2008, MNRAS, 388, 495 10. Metchev, S. A., Kirkpatrick, J. D., Berriman, G. B., & Looper, D. 2008, ApJ, 676, 1281 11. Perryman, M. A. C., et al. 1998, A&A, 331, 81 12. Testi, L. 2004, Mem. Sc. Astr. It., 75, 89 1 More recently, Hogan et al. (2008) reported the discovery of 12 L-dwarfs in the cluster.

13. Testi, L., D Antona, F., Ghinassi, F., Licandro, J., Magazzù, A., et al. 2001, ApJ 552, L147