Searching for planetary-mass T-dwarfs in the core of Serpens
L. Spezzi, C. Alves de Oliveira, E. Moraux, J. Bouvier, E. Winston, P., Hudelot, H. Bouy, J.-C. Cuillandre

TL;DR
This study searches for planetary-mass T-dwarfs in the Serpens Core cluster using deep infrared imaging and identifies four candidates, two of which may be young cluster members with masses of a few Jupiter masses.
Contribution
First deep imaging survey targeting planetary-mass T-dwarfs in Serpens, combining multiple wavelengths to identify and characterize candidates in a young star-forming region.
Findings
Four T-dwarf candidates identified, with two likely cluster members.
Two candidates are probably background contaminants, possibly quasars.
Potential discovery of very low-mass, young objects in Serpens.
Abstract
We searched for isolated planetary-mass T-dwarfs in the 3Myr old Serpens Core cluster. We performed a deep imaging survey of the central part of this cluster using the WIRCam camera at the CFHT. Observations were performed through the narrow-band CH4_off and CH4_on filters, to identify young T-dwarfs from their 1.6micr methane absorption bands, and the broad-band JHK filters, to better characterize the selected candidates. We complemented our WIRCam photometry with optical imaging data from MegaCam at CFHT and Suprime-Cam at the Subaru telescope and mid-IR flux measurements from the Spitzer c2d Legacy Survey. We report four faint T-dwarf candidates in the direction of the Serpens Core with CH4_on-CH4_off above 0.2 mag, estimated visual extinction in the range 1-9 mag and spectral type in the range T1-T5 based on their dereddened CH4_on-CH4_off colors. Comparisons with T-dwarf spectral…
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