4.6 Article

The Field Substellar Mass Function Based on the Full-sky 20 pc Census of 525 L, T, and Y Dwarfs

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL SUPPLEMENT SERIES
Volume 253, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.3847/1538-4365/abd107

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
  2. NASA
  3. W. M. Keck Foundation
  4. NASA Astrophysics Data Analysis Program [80NSSC20K0452]
  5. Fellowships and Internships in Extremely Large Data Sets (FIELDS) Program, a National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
  6. NSF Astronomy and Astrophysics Postdoctoral Fellowship [AST-1801978]
  7. LSSTC Data Science Fellowship
  8. NASA Hubble Fellowship [HST-HF2-51447.001]
  9. Space Telescope Science Institute
  10. NASA [NAS5-26555, 2017-ADAP17-0067]
  11. NSF [AST2007068, AST-2009177, AST-2009136]
  12. NASA's Astrophysics Data Analysis Program

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This study presents final Spitzer trigonometric parallaxes for 361 L, T, and Y dwarfs and combines them with prior studies to build a list of 525 known L, T, and Y dwarfs within 20 pc of the Sun. The researchers use color-magnitude and color-color diagrams to further characterize the census members and find that the best fit for the space density distribution is a power law with alpha = 0.6 +/- 0.1. The study also discusses the existence of frigid objects and possible reasons for their limited detection despite being believed to exist in substantial numbers.
We present final Spitzer trigonometric parallaxes for 361 L, T, and Y dwarfs. We combine these with prior studies to build a list of 525 known L, T, and Y dwarfs within 20 pc of the Sun, 38 of which are presented here for the first time. Using published photometry and spectroscopy as well as our own follow-up, we present an array of color-magnitude and color-color diagrams to further characterize census members, and we provide polynomial fits to the bulk trends. Using these characterizations, we assign each object a T-eff value and judge sample completeness over bins of T-eff and spectral type. Except for types >= T8 and T-eff < 600 K, our census is statistically complete to the 20 pc limit. We compare our measured space densities to simulated density distributions and find that the best fit is a power law (dN/dM proportional to M-alpha) with alpha = 0.6 +/- 0.1. We find that the evolutionary models of Saumon & Marley correctly predict the observed magnitude of the space density spike seen at 1200 K < T-eff < 1350 K, believed to be caused by an increase in the cooling timescale across the L/T transition. Defining the low-mass terminus using this sample requires a more statistically robust and complete sample of dwarfs >= Y0.5 and with T-eff < 400 K. We conclude that such frigid objects must exist in substantial numbers, despite the fact that few have so far been identified, and we discuss possible reasons why they have largely eluded detection.

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