A deep staring campaign in the Sigma Orionis cluster. Variability in substellar members
P. Elliott, A. Scholz, R. Jayawardhana, J. Eisloffel, and E. M., Hebrard

TL;DR
This study uses deep optical imaging to analyze variability in young brown dwarfs within the Sigma Orionis cluster, identifying two variable brown dwarfs and expanding knowledge of substellar members down to approximately 7 Jupiter masses.
Contribution
It provides new observational data on variability in brown dwarfs, identifies two variable objects, and refines the census of substellar members in the Sigma Orionis cluster.
Findings
Two brown dwarfs exhibit significant variability with different likely mechanisms.
Five new candidate members identified but ruled out as potential members based on infrared colours.
No wide companions found within 2000 au, supporting low occurrence rate of such companions.
Abstract
Deep optical imaging is used to study time-domain properties of young brown dwarfs in sigma Orionis over typical rotational time-scales and to search for new substellar and planetary-mass cluster members. We used VIMOS at the VLT to monitor a 24 arcmin x 16 arcmin field in the I-band. Using the individual images from this run we investigated the photometric time series of nine substellar cluster members with masses from 10 to 60 Mj. The deep stacked image shows cluster members down to 5 Mj. We search for new planetary mass objects by combining our deep I-band photometry with public J-band magnitudes and by examining the nearby environment of known very low mass members for possible companions. We find two brown dwarfs, with significantly variable, aperiodic light curves, both with masses around 50 Mj, one of which was previously unknown to be variable. The physical mechanism…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science
