Search for free-floating planetary-mass objects in the Pleiades
M. R. Zapatero Osorio, M. C. G\'alvez Ortiz, G. Bihain, C. A. L., Bailer-Jones, R. Rebolo, Th. Henning, S. Boudreault, V. J. S. B\'ejar, B., Goldman, R. Mundt, and J. A Caballero

TL;DR
This study identifies the lowest-mass free-floating objects in the Pleiades cluster, revealing their properties and extending the cluster’s substellar mass function down to planetary masses.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive survey of substellar objects in the Pleiades down to planetary masses, improving understanding of their properties and the cluster’s mass function.
Findings
Detected substellar candidates down to ~0.008 Msol
Found no color turn-over due to methane absorption down to J=20.3 mag
Mass function extends to deuterium-burning limit with a similar slope to other clusters
Abstract
(Abridged) We aim at identifying the least massive population of the solar metallicity, young (120 Myr), nearby (133.5 pc) Pleiades star cluster with the ultimate goal of understanding the physical properties of intermediate-age, free-floating, low-mass brown dwarfs and giant planetary-mass objects, and deriving the cluster substellar mass function across the deuterium-burning mass limit at ~0.012 Msol. We performed a deep photometric and astrometric J- and H-band survey covering an area of ~0.8 deg^2. The images with completeness and limiting magnitudes of J,H ~ 20.2 and ~ 21.5 mag were acquired ~9 yr apart (proper motion precision of +/-6 mas/yr). J- and H-band data were complemented with Z, K, and mid-infrared magnitudes up to 4.6 micron coming from UKIDSS, WISE, and follow-up observations of our own. Pleiades member candidates were selected to have proper motions compatible with…
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