New isolated planetary mass objects and the stellar and substellar mass function of the sigma Orionis cluster
K. Pe\~na Ram\'irez, V.J.S. B\'ejar, M.R. Zapatero Osorio, M.G., Petr-Gotzens, E.L. Mart\'in

TL;DR
This study analyzes the sigma Orionis cluster using multi-wavelength photometry, identifying new planetary-mass objects, characterizing the mass function, and examining disk presence, revealing a rich population of substellar objects and their spatial distribution.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive mass function extending into planetary masses in sigma Orionis and reports the discovery of 23 new planetary-mass objects.
Findings
Identified 23 new planetary-mass objects in sigma Orionis.
Mass spectrum follows two power-law regimes with indices 1.7 and 0.6.
Discovered a T-type object with colors consistent with a T spectral type.
Abstract
We report on our analysis of the VISTA Orion ZYJHKs photometric data (completeness magnitudes Z=22.6 and J=21.0mag) focusing on a circular area of 2798.4 arcmin^2 around the young sigma Orionis star cluster (~3Myr, ~352pc, solar metallicity). The combination of the VISTA photometry with optical, WISE and Spitzer data allows us to identify a total of 210 cluster member candidates with masses in the interval 0.25-0.004Msun, 23 of which are new planetary-mass object findings. These discoveries double the number of cluster planetary-mass candidates known so far. One object has colors compatible with a T spectral type. The cluster harbors about as many brown dwarfs (69, 0.072-0.012Msun) and planetary-mass objects (37, 0.012-0.004Msun) as very low-mass stars (104, 0.25-0.072Msun). Based on Spitzer data, we derive a disk frequency of ~40% for very low-mass stars, brown dwarfs, and planetary…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
