4.7 Article

SUBSTELLAR OBJECTS IN NEARBY YOUNG CLUSTERS (SONYC): THE BOTTOM OF THE INITIAL MASS FUNCTION IN NGC 1333

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 702, Issue 1, Pages 805-822

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/702/1/805

Keywords

circumstellar matter; planetary systems; stars: formation; stars: low-mass, brown dwarfs

Ask authors/readers for more resources

SONYC-Substellar Objects in Nearby Young Clusters-is a survey program to investigate the frequency and properties of substellar objects with masses down to a few times that of Jupiter in nearby star-forming regions. Here, we present the first results from SONYC observations of NGC 1333, a similar to 1Myr old cluster in the Perseus starforming complex. We have carried out extremely deep optical and near-infrared imaging in four bands (i', z', J, K) using Subaru Prime Focus Camera and Multi-Object InfraRed Camera and Spectrograph (MOIRCS) instruments at the Subaru telescope. The survey covers 0.25 deg(2) and reaches completeness limits of 24.7 mag in the i' band and 20.8mag in the J band. We select 196 candidates with colors as expected for young, very lowmass objects. Follow-up multi-object spectroscopy with MOIRCS is presented for 53 objects. We confirm 19 objects as likely brown dwarfs (BDs) inNGC1333, seven of them previously known. Nine additional objects are classified as possible stellar cluster members, likely with early to midMspectral types. The confirmed objects are strongly clustered around the peak in the gas distribution and the core of the cluster of known stellar members. For 11 of them, we confirm the presence of disks based on Spitzer/Infrared Array Camera photometry. The effective temperatures for the BD sample range from 2500 K to 3000 K, which translates to masses of similar to 0.015-0.1M(circle dot), based on model evolutionary tracks. For comparison, the completeness limit of our survey translates to mass limits of 0.004 M-circle dot for A(V) less than or similar to 5 mag or 0.008 M-circle dot for A(V) less than or similar to 10 mag. Compared with other star-forming regions, NGC 1333 shows an overabundance of BDs relative to low-mass stars, by a factor of 2-5. On the other hand, NGC 1333 has a deficit of planetary-mass objects: based on the surveys in sigma Orionis, the Orion Nebula Cluster and Chamaeleon I, the expected number of planetary-mass objects in NGC 1333 is 8-10, but we find none. It is plausible that our survey has detected the minimum mass limit for star formation in this particular cluster, at around 0.012-0.02 M-circle dot. If confirmed, our findings point to significant regional/environmental differences in the number of BDs and the minimum mass of the initial mass function.

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