4.7 Article

THE SUBSTELLAR POPULATION OF σ ORIONIS: A DEEP WIDE SURVEY

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 743, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/743/1/64

Keywords

brown dwarfs; open clusters and associations: individual (sigma Orionis); stars: individual (sigma Orionis); stars: low-mass; stars: luminosity function, mass function; stars: pre-main sequence

Funding

  1. National Aeronautics and Space Administration
  2. National Science Foundation
  3. Spanish Ramon y Cajal program
  4. Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion [AYA2007-67458, AYA2010-20535, AYA2010-21038-C03-01, AYA2010-21038-C0302]
  5. Keck PI Data Analysis
  6. Michelson Science Center

Ask authors/readers for more resources

We present a deep I, Z photometric survey covering a total area of 1.12 deg(2) of the sigma Orionis cluster and reaching completeness magnitudes of I = 22 and Z = 21.5 mag. From I, I - Z color-magnitude diagrams we have selected 153 candidates that fit the previously known sequence of the cluster. They have magnitudes in the range I = 16-23 mag, which corresponds to a mass interval from 0.1 down to 0.008 M-circle dot at the most probable age of sigma Orionis (2-4 Myr). Using J-band photometry, we find that 124 of the 151 candidates within the completeness of the optical survey (82%) follow the previously known infrared photometric sequence of the cluster and are probably members. We have studied the spatial distribution of the very low mass stars and brown dwarf population of the cluster and found that there are objects located at distances greater than 30 arcmin to the north and west of sigma Orionis that probably belong to different populations of the Orion's Belt. For the 102 bona fide sigma Orionis cluster member candidates, we find that the radial surface density can be represented by a decreasing exponential function (sigma = sigma(0)e(-r/r0)) with a central density of sigma(0) = 0.23 +/- 0.03 objects arcmin(-2) and a characteristic radius of r(0) = 9.5 +/- 0.7 arcmin. From a statistical comparison with Monte Carlo simulations, we conclude that the spatial distribution of the objects located at the same distance from the center of the cluster is compatible with a Poissonian distribution and, hence, that very low mass stars and brown dwarfs are not mainly forming aggregations or sub-clustering. Using near-infrared JHK-band data from Two Micron All Sky Survey and UKIRT Deep Infrared Sky Survey and mid-infrared data from Infrared Array Camera/Spitzer, we find that about 5%-9% of the brown dwarf candidates in the sigma Orionis cluster have K-band excesses and 30% +/- 7% of them show mid-infrared excesses at wavelengths longer than 5.8 mu m. These are probably related to the presence of disks, most of which are transition disks. We have also calculated the initial mass spectrum (dN/dm) of sigma Orionis from very low mass stars (similar to 0.10 M-circle dot) to the deuterium-burning mass limit (0.012-0.013 M-circle dot), i.e., complete in the entire brown dwarf regime. This mass spectrum is a rising function toward lower masses and can be represented by a power-law distribution (dN/dm proportional to m(-alpha)) with an exponent alpha of 0.7 +/- 0.3 for an age of 3 Myr.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available