A Sample of Very Young Field L Dwarfs and Implications for the Brown Dwarf "Lithium Test" at Early Ages
J. Davy Kirkpatrick, Kelle L. Cruz, Travis S. Barman, Adam J., Burgasser, Dagny L. Looper, C. G. Tinney, Christopher R. Gelino, Patrick J., Lowrance, James Liebert, John M. Carpenter, Lynne A. Hillenbrand, and John R., Stauffer

TL;DR
This study analyzes a large sample of late-type dwarfs to identify young L dwarfs and examines how lithium line strength varies with age and gravity, impacting brown dwarf age diagnostics.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence on the age-related behavior of lithium lines in L dwarfs and highlights the importance of gravity effects in brown dwarf age estimation.
Findings
7.6% of field L dwarfs are younger than 100 Myr.
Lithium line strength peaks at a few hundred Myr for early- to mid-L dwarfs.
Weakening of lithium line at lower gravity supports model predictions.
Abstract
Using a large sample of optical spectra of late-type dwarfs, we identify a subset of late-M through L field dwarfs that, because of the presence of low-gravity features in their spectra, are believed to be unusually young. From a combined sample of 303 field L dwarfs, we find observationally that 7.6+/-1.6% are younger than 100 Myr. This percentage is in agreement with theoretical predictions once observing biases are taken into account. We find that these young L dwarfs tend to fall in the southern hemisphere (Dec < 0 deg) and may be previously unrecognized, low-mass members of nearby, young associations like Tucana-Horologium, TW Hydrae, beta Pictoris, and AB Doradus. We use a homogeneously observed sample of roughly one hundred and fifty 6300-10000 Angstrom spectra of L and T dwarfs taken with the Low-Resolution Imaging Spectrometer at the W. M. Keck Observatory to examine the…
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