Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- I Searches in Clusters, Stellar Associations and the Field
- Open Clusters After HIPPARCOS
- Proper Motions of Very Low Mass Stars and Brown Dwarfs in Open Clusters
- Parallaxes for Brown Dwarfs in Clusters
- Very Low Mass Stars and Brown Dwarfs in the Belt of Orion
- Photometric Surveys in Open Clusters
- The Mass Function of the Pleiades
- Brown Dwarfs and the Low-Mass Initial Mass Function in Young Clusters
- Very-Low-Mass Stars in Globular Clusters
- The DENIS Very Low Mass Star and Brown Dwarf Results (Sample, Spectroscopy and Luminosity Function)
- Preliminary Results from the 2MASS Core Project
- II Spectroscopic Properties, Fundamental Parameters and Modelling
- III Convection, Rotation and Activity
- Author index
Proper Motions of Very Low Mass Stars and Brown Dwarfs in Open Clusters
from I - Searches in Clusters, Stellar Associations and the Field
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- I Searches in Clusters, Stellar Associations and the Field
- Open Clusters After HIPPARCOS
- Proper Motions of Very Low Mass Stars and Brown Dwarfs in Open Clusters
- Parallaxes for Brown Dwarfs in Clusters
- Very Low Mass Stars and Brown Dwarfs in the Belt of Orion
- Photometric Surveys in Open Clusters
- The Mass Function of the Pleiades
- Brown Dwarfs and the Low-Mass Initial Mass Function in Young Clusters
- Very-Low-Mass Stars in Globular Clusters
- The DENIS Very Low Mass Star and Brown Dwarf Results (Sample, Spectroscopy and Luminosity Function)
- Preliminary Results from the 2MASS Core Project
- II Spectroscopic Properties, Fundamental Parameters and Modelling
- III Convection, Rotation and Activity
- Author index
Summary
Open clusters are a rich source of very low mass stars and brown dwarfs of a single known metallicity, age, and distance. Proper motion surveys enable candidate members within these clusters to be identified with a reasonably high degree of confidence. The nearby clusters are therefore a challenging test-bed for the latest evolutionary models of these ellusive objects. In this talk, I will review the progress that has been made recently in pushing proper motion surveys through very low mass ranges into the substellar régime, and I examine the prospects for extending these surveys to other clusters and to lower masses.
Introduction
Open clusters provide the astronomer with a rich source of objects for studying stellar structure over the full mass range of stable, hydrogen burning stars; furthermore, stellar evolution can be studied as the higher mass stars evolve away from, and as the low mass stars contract onto, the main sequence. Moreover, open cluster studies of objects that have too low a mass to stabilise on the hydrogen burning main sequence (i.e. brown dwarfs) have recently come of age, so now it is possible to study the physics of coeval objects having masses ranging over three orders of magnitude (and luminosities over eight orders of magnitude). Properties of very low mass (VLM) stars being studied in open clusters include lithium evolution, angular momentum evolution, spotting and variability, choronal activity, the binary fraction, and, most fundamentally, the mass function.
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- Very Low-Mass Stars and Brown Dwarfs , pp. 17 - 28Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000
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