4.7 Article

Spectroscopic rotational velocities of brown dwarfs

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 647, Issue 2, Pages 1405-1412

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/505484

Keywords

stars : individual (DENIS-P J0255.0-4700, GL 570D, LP 944-20, [Pleiades] PPl 1, SDSS J053951.99-005902.0, SDSS J134646.45-003150.4, SDSS J162414.37+002915.6, SDSSp J125453.90-012247.4, 2MASS J00361617+1821104, 2MASS J03341218-4953322, 2MASS J04151954-0935066, 2MASS J05591914-1404488, 2MASS J12171110-0311131, 2MASS J15031961+2525196, 2MASS J15530228+1532369AB, 2MASS J16322911+1904407, 2MASS J17281150+3948593AB, 2MASS J22244381-0158521, vB 10); stars : low-mass; brown dwarfs; stars : rotation

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We have obtained projected rotation velocities (nu(rot) sin i) of a sample of 19 ultracool dwarfs with spectral types in the interval M6.5-T8 using high-resolution, near-infrared spectra obtained with NIRSPEC and the Keck II telescope. Among our targets there are two young brown dwarfs, two likely field stars, and 15 likely brown dwarfs (30-72 M-Jup) in the solar neighborhood. Our results indicate that the T-type dwarfs are fast rotators in marked contrast to M-type stars. We have derived nu(rot) sin i velocities between <= 15 and 40 km s(-1) for them and have found no clear evidence for T dwarfs rotating strongly faster than L dwarfs. However, there is a hint for an increasing lower envelope on moving from mid-M to L spectral types in the nu(rot) sin i-spectral-type diagram that was previously reported in the literature; our nu(rot) sin i results extend it to even cooler types. Assuming that field brown dwarfs have a size of 0.08-0.1 R-circle dot, we can place an upper limit of 12.5 hr on the equatorial rotation period of T-type brown dwarfs. In addition, we have compared our nu(rot) sin i measurements to spectroscopic rotational velocities of very young brown dwarfs of similar mass available in the literature. The comparison, although model dependent, suggests that brown dwarfs lose some angular momentum during their contraction; however, their spin-down time seems to be significantly longer than that of solar-type to early M stars.

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