Primeval very low-mass stars and brown dwarfs - III. The halo transitional brown dwarfs
Z. H. Zhang, D. J. Pinfield, M. C. Galvez-Ortiz, D. Homeier, A. J., Burgasser, N. Lodieu, E. L. Martin, M. R. Zapatero Osorio, F. Allard, H. R., A. Jones, R. L. Smart, B. Lopez Marti, B. Burningham, R. Rebolo

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and characterization of three halo transitional brown dwarfs with unsteady hydrogen fusion, expanding the understanding of the substellar subdwarf gap in the halo population.
Contribution
It identifies and characterizes three new halo transitional brown dwarfs, providing insights into their properties and the substellar subdwarf gap in the halo.
Findings
Three new halo subdwarfs with typical halo kinematics.
Masses just below the hydrogen-burning minimum mass.
These objects likely have unsteady hydrogen fusion.
Abstract
We report the discovery of an esdL3 subdwarf, ULAS J020858.62+020657.0, and a usdL4.5 subdwarf, ULAS J230711.01+014447.1. They were identified as L subdwarfs by optical spectra obtained with the Gran Telescopio Canarias, and followed up by optical-to-near-infrared spectroscopy with the Very Large Telescope. We also obtained an optical-to-near-infrared spectrum of a previously known L subdwarf, ULAS J135058.85+081506.8, and reclassified it as a usdL3 subdwarf. These three objects all have typical halo kinematics. They have around 20502250 K, 1.8 [Fe/H] 1.5, and mass around 0.08220.0833 M, according to model spectral fitting and evolutionary models. These sources are likely halo transitional brown dwarfs with unsteady hydrogen fusion, as their masses are just below the hydrogen-burning minimum mass, which is 0.0845 M at…
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