The ultracool-field dwarf luminosity-function and space density from the Canada-France Brown Dwarf Survey
C. Reyle, P. Delorme, C.J. Willott, L. Albert, X. Delfosse, T., Forveille, E. Artigau, L. Malo, G.J. Hill, and R. Doyon

TL;DR
This study uses the Canada-France Brown Dwarf Survey to identify ultracool brown dwarfs, constraining their luminosity function and space density, revealing a higher density of late T and Y dwarfs consistent with a flat substellar mass function.
Contribution
It provides a large, homogeneous sample of ultracool dwarfs to refine the luminosity function and space density estimates, improving understanding of substellar populations.
Findings
Density of late L to T dwarfs is approximately 2.0 x 10^-3 objects pc^-3.
Density of T0.5 to T5.5 dwarfs is approximately 1.4 x 10^-3 objects pc^-3.
High density of T and Y dwarfs suggests many such objects remain to be discovered.
Abstract
Context. Thanks to recent and ongoing large scale surveys, hundreds of brown dwarfs have been discovered in the last decade. The Canada-France Brown Dwarf Survey is a wide-field survey for cool brown dwarfs conducted with the MegaCam camera on the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope telescope. Aims. Our objectives are to find ultracool brown dwarfs and to constrain the field brown-dwarf luminosity function and the mass function from a large and homogeneous sample of L and T dwarfs. Methods. We identify candidates in CFHT/MegaCam i' and z' images and follow them up with pointed near infrared (NIR) imaging on several telescopes. Halfway through our survey we found ~50 T dwarfs and ~170 L or ultra cool M dwarfs drawn from a larger sample of 1400 candidates with typical ultracool dwarfs i' - z' colours, found in 780 square degrees. Results. We have currently completed the NIR follow-up on a…
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