An IPHAS-based search for accreting very low-mass objects using VO tools
L. Valdivielso, E. L. Martin, H. Bouy, E. Solano, J. E. Drew, R., Greimel, R. Gutierrez, Y. C. Unruh, J. S Vink

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that IPHAS, combined with Virtual Observatory tools, effectively identifies accreting very low-mass stars and brown dwarfs across large sky areas, revealing numerous candidates for further study.
Contribution
The paper introduces a new method using IPHAS data and VO tools to efficiently find accreting low-mass stellar objects and brown dwarfs over extensive sky regions.
Findings
Identified 4000 candidates with Halpha emission over 1600 sq. degrees.
Confirmed 33 candidates as accreting low-mass stars and brown dwarfs.
Estimated hundreds of such objects could be found in the full IPHAS survey.
Abstract
The main goal of this paper is to prove that accreting very low-mass stars and brown dwarfs can be identified in IPHAS, a Halpha emission survey of the northern Milky Way.Full exploitation of the IPHAS database and a future extension of it in the southern hemisphere will be useful to identify very low-mass accreting objects near and far well-known star forming regions. We have used Virtual Observatory tools to cross-match the IPHAS catalogue with the 2MASS catalogue. We defined photometric criteria to identify Halpha emission sources with near-infrared colours similar to known young very low-mass stars and brown dwarfs. 4000 candidates were identified that met our criteria over an area of 1600 square degrees. We present low-resolution optical spectra of 113 candidates. Spectral types have been derived for the 33 candidates that have spectroscopically confirmed Halpha emission,…
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