The First Hundred Brown Dwarfs Discovered by the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE)
J. Davy Kirkpatrick, Michael C. Cushing, Christopher R. Gelino, Roger, L. Griffith, Michael F. Skrutskie, Kenneth A. Marsh, Edward L. Wright, Amanda, K. Mainzer, Peter R. Eisenhardt, Ian S. McLean, Maggie A. Thompson, James M., Bauer, Dominic J. Benford, Carrie R. Bridge

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and characterization of numerous brown dwarfs, including the closest Y dwarf to date, using WISE data, and discusses their implications for understanding the local low-mass stellar population.
Contribution
First comprehensive survey of late-T and Y dwarfs using WISE, including spectroscopic verification, distance estimation, and initial space density constraints.
Findings
Closest Y dwarf at 2.8 pc, potentially seventh nearest system.
Many discoveries within 10 pc, enriching the local low-mass star census.
Initial lower limits on space density of late-T and Y dwarfs.
Abstract
We present ground-based spectroscopic verification of six Y dwarfs (see Cushing et al), eighty-nine T dwarfs, eight L dwarfs, and one M dwarf identified by the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE). Eighty of these are cold brown dwarfs with spectral types greater than or equal to T6, six of which have been announced earlier in Mainzer et al and Burgasser et al. We present color-color and color-type diagrams showing the locus of M, L, T, and Y dwarfs in WISE color space. Near-infrared classifications as late as early Y are presented and objects with peculiar spectra are discussed. After deriving an absolute WISE 4.6 um (W2) magnitude vs. spectral type relation, we estimate spectrophotometric distances to our discoveries. We also use available astrometric measurements to provide preliminary trigonometric parallaxes to four our discoveries, which have types of L9 pec (red), T8, T9,…
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