Parallax and Luminosity Measurements of an L Subdwarf
Adam J. Burgasser (MIT), Frederick J. Vrba (USNO), S\'ebastien, L\'epine (American Museum of Natural History), Jeffrey A. Munn (USNO),, Christian B. Luginbuhl (USNO), Arne A. Henden (AAVSO), Harry H. Guetter, (USNO), and Blaise C. Canzian (L-3 Communications/Brashear)

TL;DR
This paper reports the first parallax and luminosity measurements of an L subdwarf, providing insights into its physical properties, kinematics, and implications for brown dwarf classification and low-metallicity stellar models.
Contribution
It presents the first parallax and luminosity data for an L subdwarf, enabling better understanding of its mass, metallicity, and evolutionary status.
Findings
The subdwarf is a brown dwarf just below the hydrogen burning limit.
It has a retrograde, eccentric orbit indicating halo membership.
Its brightness suggests reduced atmospheric opacity due to inhibited condensate formation.
Abstract
We present the first parallax and luminosity measurements for an L subdwarf, the sdL7 2MASS J05325346+8246465. Observations conducted over three years by the USNO infrared astrometry program yield an astrometric distance of 26.7+/-1.2 pc and a proper motion of 2.6241+/-0.0018"/yr. Combined with broadband spectral and photometric measurements, we determine a luminosity of log(Lbol/Lsun) = -4.24+/-0.06 and Teff = 1730+/-90 K (the latter assuming an age of 5-10 Gyr), comparable to mid-type L field dwarfs. Comparison of the luminosity of 2MASS J05325346+8246465 to theoretical evolutionary models indicates that its mass is just below the sustained hydrogen burning limit, and is therefore a brown dwarf. Its kinematics indicate a ~110 Myr, retrograde Galactic orbit which is both eccentric (3 <~ R <~ 8.5 kpc) and extends well away from the plane (Delta_Z = +/-2 kpc), consistent with membership…
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