Space Velocities of L- and T-type Dwarfs
M. R. Zapatero Osorio (IAC), E. L. Martin (IAC, Univ. of Central, Florida), V. J. S. Bejar (IAC), H. Bouy (Univ. Berkeley, IAC), R. Deshpande, (Univ. of Central Florida), R. J. Wainscoat (IfA)

TL;DR
This study measures space velocities of 18 ultracool dwarfs, revealing they are generally younger and kinematically distinct from earlier-type stars, with many associated with the Hyades moving group.
Contribution
It provides new radial velocity measurements and space motion analysis for L and T dwarfs, highlighting their younger age and kinematic properties compared to other stellar populations.
Findings
L and T dwarfs have smaller mean velocities than G to M stars.
Approximately 40% of L and T dwarfs are near the Hyades moving group.
Kinematic dispersions suggest ages of 0.5-4 Gyr for these ultracool dwarfs.
Abstract
(Abridged) We have obtained radial velocities of a sample of 18 ultracool dwarfs (M6.5-T8) using high-resolution, near-infrared spectra obtained with NIRSPEC and the Keck II telescope. We have confirmed that the radial velocity of Gl 570 D is coincident with that of the K-type primary star Gl 570 A, thus providing additional support for their true companionship. The presence of planetary-mass companions around 2MASS J05591914-1404488 (T4.5V) has been analyzed using five NIRSPEC radial velocity measurements obtained over a period of 4.37 yr. We have computed UVW space motions for a total of 21 L and T dwarfs within 20 pc of the Sun. This population shows UVW velocities that nicely overlap the typical kinematics of solar to M-type stars within the same spatial volume. However, the mean Galactic (44.2 km/s) and tangential (36.5 km/s) velocities of the L and T dwarfs appear to be smaller…
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