4.7 Article

Evidence for a T Tauri phase in young brown dwarfs

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 592, Issue 1, Pages 282-287

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/375573

Keywords

circumstellar matter; planetary systems; stars : formation; stars : low-mass, brown dwarfs; stars : pre-main-sequence; techniques : spectroscopic

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As part of a multifaceted program to investigate the origin and early evolution of substellar objects, we present high-resolution Keck optical spectra of 14 very low mass sources in the IC 348 young cluster and the Taurus star-forming cloud. All of our targets, which span a range of spectral types from M5 to M8, exhibit moderate to very strong Halpha emission. In half of the IC 348 objects, the Halpha profiles are broad and asymmetric, indicative of ongoing accretion. Of these, IC 348-355 ( M8) is the lowest mass object to date to show accretion-like Halpha. Three of our similar toM6IC 348 targets with broad Halpha also harbor broad O I (8446 Angstrom) and Ca II (8662 Angstrom) emission, and one shows broad He I (6678 Angstrom) emission; these features are usually seen in strongly accreting classical T Tauri stars. We find that in very low mass accretors, the Halpha profile may be somewhat narrower than that in higher mass stars. We propose that low accretion rates combined with small infall velocities at very low masses can conspire to produce this effect. In the nonaccretors in our sample, Halpha emission is commensurate with, or higher than, saturated levels in field M dwarfs of similar spectral type. Our results constitute the most compelling evidence to date that young brown dwarfs undergo a T Tauri-like accretion phase similar to that in stars. This is consistent with a common origin for most low-mass stars, brown dwarfs, and isolated planetary mass objects.

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