Population Properties of Brown Dwarf Analogs to Exoplanets
Jacqueline K. Faherty, Adric R. Riedel, Kelle L. Cruz, Jonathan Gagne,, Joseph C. Filippazzo, Erini Lambrides, Haley Fica, Alycia Weinberger, John R., Thorstensen, C. G. Tinney, Vivienne Baldassare, Emily Lemonier, Emily L. Rice

TL;DR
This study analyzes the kinematic properties and photometric characteristics of low surface gravity M7-L8 dwarfs, revealing how age and gravity influence their observable features and their association with nearby moving groups.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive kinematic and photometric analysis of low-gravity brown dwarf analogs, clarifying their age-related properties and their relation to field objects and moving groups.
Findings
Identified 39 high-likelihood members of nearby moving groups.
Low-gravity classification correlates with age but not perfectly.
Low-gravity L dwarfs show flux redistribution and redder colors.
Abstract
We present a kinematic analysis of 152 low surface gravity M7-L8 dwarfs by adding 8 parallaxes, 38 radial velocities, and 19 proper motions. We find 39 objects to be high-likelihood or bona fide members of nearby moving groups, 92 objects to be ambiguous members and 21 objects that are non-members. We find that gravity classification and photometric color separate 5-150 Myr sources from > 3 Gyr field objects, but they do not correlate one-to-one with the narrower 5 -150 Myr age range. The absolute magnitudes of low-gravity sources from J band through W3 show a flux redistribution when compared to equivalent field sources that is correlated with spectral subtype. Clouds, which are a far more dominant opacity source for L dwarfs, are the likely cause. On CMDs, the latest-type low-gravity L dwarfs drive the elbow of the L/T transition up to 1 mag redder and 1 mag fainter than field dwarfs…
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