Brown dwarfs and isolated planetary-mass objects in star clusters

Rebolo, Rafael
Bibliographical reference

"5th Hellenic Astronomical Conference, held 20-22 September, 2001 in Crete, Greece. Online at http://www.astro.auth.gr/elaset/helasmtg/2001/proceedings.htm, p.60.1"

Advertised on:
9
2001
Number of authors
1
IAC number of authors
0
Citations
0
Refereed citations
0
Description
Brown dwarfs are objects unable to sustain hydrogen burning in their interiors. Deep surveys and large scale infrared surveys have identified a few hundred candidates free-floating in star clusters and in the solar neighborhood. Several brown dwarf companions to low-mass stars have also been detected. In the absence of a direct mass determination, brown dwarfs can be identified by the presence of lithium and/or methane bands in their spectra. Our recent surveys in Orion show that brown dwarfs can form with any mass in the range between the minimum mass for hydrogen burning (~75 M_Jupiter, at solar metallicity) and the minimum mass for deuterium burning (~13 M_Jup). Objects with planetary masses, just 5-10 times that of Jupiter have also been detected free floating in very young star clusters. Older and much cooler counterparts are likely to populate the solar neighborhood. We discuss the mass function in the brown dwarf domain and its possible extension to masses in the planetary domain. If current estimates from young star forming regions are representative of the substellar population in the disk of our Galaxy, brown dwarfs and isolated Jupiter-like objects may outnumber stars