Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics
Scientific paper
1998-07-24
Astrophys.J.509:836-847,1998
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Astrophysics
ApJ, in press. 18 pages. Also available at ftp://ftp.jach.hawaii.edu/pub/ukirt/skl/dM_preprint/
Scientific paper
10.1086/306517
We present new infrared photometry for 61 halo and disk stars around the stellar/substellar boundary. These data are combined with available optical photometry and astrometric data to produce color--color and absolute magnitude--color diagrams. The disk and halo sequences are compared to the predictions of the latest model atmospheres and structural models. We find good agreement between observation and theory except for known problems in the V and H passbands probably due to incomplete molecular data for TiO, metal hydrides and H$_2$O. The metal--poor M subdwarfs are well matched by the models as oxide opacity sources are less important in this case. The known extreme M subdwarfs have metallicities about one--hundredth solar, and the coolest subdwarfs have T$_{eff}\sim 3000$ K with masses $\sim $0.09M/M$_{\odot}$. The grainless models are not able to reproduce the flux distributions of disk objects with T$_{eff} <$ 2500 K, however a preliminary version of the NextGen--Dusty models which includes homogeneous formation and extinction by dust grains {\it is} able to match the colors of these very cool objects. The least luminous objects in this sample are GD165B, three DENIS objects --- DBD0205, DBD1058 and DBD1228 --- and Kelu-1. These have T$_{eff}\sim$ 2000 K and are at or below the stellar limit with masses $\leq$0.075M/M$_{\odot}$. Photometry alone cannot constrain these parameters further as the age is unknown, but published lithium detections for two of these objects (Kelu-1 and DBD1228) imply that they are young (aged about 1 Gyr) and substellar (mass $\leq$0.06M/M$_{\odot}$).
Allard France
Hauschildt Peter. H.
Leggett Sandy K.
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