Primeval very low-mass stars and brown dwarfs - IV. New L subdwarfs, Gaia astrometry, population properties, and a blue brown dwarf binary

Rebolo, R.; Zapatero Osorio, M. R.; Martín, E. L.; Marocco, F.; Smart, R. L.; Homeier, D.; Pinfield, D. J.; Burgasser, A. J.; Jones, H. R. A.; López Martí, B.; Lodieu, N.; Zhang, Z. H.; Allard, F.; Smith, L. C.; Burningham, B.; Galvez-Ortiz, M. C.

France, Spain, United Kingdom, United States, Germany, Italy

Abstract

We present 27 new L subdwarfs and classify five of them as esdL and 22 as sdL. Our L subdwarf candidates were selected with the UKIRT Infrared Deep Sky Survey and Sloan Digital Sky Survey. Spectroscopic follow-up was carried out primarily with the OSIRIS spectrograph on the Gran Telescopio Canarias. Some of these new objects were followed up with the X-shooter instrument on the Very Large Telescope. We studied the photometric properties of the population of known L subdwarfs using colour-spectral type diagrams and colour-colour diagrams, by comparison with L dwarfs and main sequence stars, and identified new colour spaces for L subdwarf selection/study in current and future surveys. We further discussed the brown dwarf transition-zone and the observational stellar/substellar boundary. We found that about one-third of 66 known L subdwarfs are substellar objects, with two-thirds being very low-mass stars. We also present the Hertzsprung-Russell diagrams, spectral type-absolute magnitude corrections, and tangential velocities of 20 known L subdwarfs observed by the Gaia astrometry satellite. One of our L subdwarf candidates, ULAS J233227.03+123452.0, is a mildly metal-poor spectroscopic binary brown dwarf: a ∼L6p dwarf and a ∼T4p dwarf. This binary is likely a thick disc member according to its kinematics.

2018 Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Gaia 35