Ben Burningham

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Ben Burningham Brown dwarfs in large scale surveys Brown dwarfs come of age Fuerteventura, 21 st May 2013

description

Brown dwarfs in large scale surveys. Ben Burningham. Brown dwarfs come of age Fuerteventura, 21 st May 2013. Plan. a bit of history the recent past the state of the art future challenges. The first wide area surveys. not digital relatively simple data pipeline c 1200 BC 36 stars. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Ben Burningham

Page 1: Ben  Burningham

Ben Burningham

Brown dwarfs in large scale surveys

Brown dwarfs come of ageFuerteventura, 21st May 2013

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Plan

a bit of history

the recent past

the state of the art

future challenges

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The first wide area surveys

not digital relatively simple data

pipeline c 1200 BC 36 stars

L5 dwarf @ ~100 au T5 dwarf @ ~ 100 au

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Greek pioneers Timocharis & Aristillus

c300BC Hipparchus c135BC

1022 stars m < 6 updated in 964 (Sufi) and

1543 (Copernicus) no brown dwarfs (but did discover

precession of equinox)

L5 dwarf @ ~2000 au T5 dwarf @ ~ 1000 au

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The next 2000 years…. Tycho Brahe (1598):

m < 6 1004 stars astrometric accuracy ~2’

Lalande et al (1801) 50K stars m < 9

Henry Draper (1918 – 1924) first spectroscopic survey all sky m < 10

Bonner Durchmusterung  (1852 – 1859); Cordoba Durchmusterung (1892); Cape Photographic Durchmusterung (1896) total 1 million stars  all sky m < 9 - 10 L5 dwarf @ ~10000 au

T 5dwarf @ ~2000 au

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Photographic surveys20th century dominated by three facilities: Palomar observatory:

POSS I (1949 – 1958) -27 to +90 degrees B ~ 21

POSS II Bj < 22.5, Rc < 20.8, Ic < 19.5

UK & ESO Schmidt telescopes: ESO/SERC

Bj ~ 22.5, Rc ~ 21 Ic band

Ic < 19

L5 dwarf @ ~20 pc T5 dwarf @ ~ 4 pc

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The first brown dwarfs - 1995

Rebolo, Zapatero Osorio,& Martin, 1995

Nakajima et al 1995

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Kelu - 1 L2 dwarf selected by

proper motion 1st epoch:

ESO survey plates

2nd epoch: dedicated follow-up of 400

sq degs

examined with a blink comparator

Ruiz et al (1997)

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Legacy of photographic surveys DSS I & II Catalogues from densitometer scans:

GSC I & II USNOA, B superCOSMOS

Proper motion catalogues e.g. LHS, LSPM, PPMXL etc identification of (ultra) cool >M7 dwarfs the first L dwarf (Ruiz et al 1997)

(the trickle before the flood)

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The age of digital sky surveysFacilitated by :

new detectors improvements in data processing and storage first brown dwarfs identified in late 1990s

(important: allows photometric selection)

New generation dominated by 3 surveys: DENIS

2MASS

SDSS

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DENIS Overview

southern sky (ESO 1m schmidt) i < 18.5, J < 16.5 , Ks < 14.0 finished in 2001 355 million sources

Results: 49 L dwarfs:

Delfosse et al (1997, 1999) Martin et al (1999) Bouy et al (2003) Kendall et al (2004) Phan-Bao et al (2008) Martin et al (2010)

1 T dwarf Artigua et al (2010) L5 dwarf @ ~40 pc

T5 dwarf @ ~ 20 pc

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2MASS All sky JHK (J < 16.5; H < 15.7; Ks < 15.2) >99% complete for J < 15.8, H < 15.1, Ks <

14.3

game changer for substellar science

L5 dwarf @ ~45 pc T5 dwarf @ ~ 20 pc

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Brown dwarfs in 2MASS 2MASS team searched via cross match of 2MASS against USNO for B+R

band dropouts visual inspection to ensure no optical detection distinguished as L and T candidates based on JHK colours

subsequent searches cross matched 2MASS with e.g. SDSS, and included proper motion searches

403 L dwarfs identified to-date: Kirkpatrick et al (1999, 2000, 2008, 2010); Reid et al (2000, 2008); Gizis

(2002); Gizis et al (2000, 2003); Kendall et al (2003, 2007); Cruz et al (2003, 2007); Burgasser et al (2003, 2004); Wilson et al (2003); Folkes et al (2007); Metchev et al (2008); Looper et al (2008) Sheppard & Cushing (2009); Scholz et al (2009); Geissler et al (2011)

55 T dwarfs: Kirkpatrick et al (2000, 2010); Burgasser et al (1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004,

); Cruz et al (2004) Tinney et al (2005); Looper et al (2007); Reid et al (2008)

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SDSSSDSS DR9:

14,555 square degrees 932,891,133 “sources” 1.7 million extragalactic spectra 700K stellar spectra z’ < 20.8ish

“arguably the most successful scientific project ever undertaken”

L5 dwarf @ ~75 pc T5 dwarf @ ~ 40 pc

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Brown dwarfs in SDSS381 L dwarfs to-date:

photometric selection: Fan et al (2000) Hawley et al (2002); Geballe et al

(2002); Schneider et al (2002); Knapp et al (2004); Chiu et al (2006); Zhang et al (2009); Scholz et al (2009)

spectroscopic selection: Schmidt et al (2010) highlights risky nature of photometric selection

57 T dwarfs: Leggett et al (2000); Geballe et al (2002); Knapp et al

(2004); Chiu et al (2006)

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Highlights from the end of the beginning

definition of the “L” spectral class 830 L dwarfs discovered extended to halo population and

young moving groups

definition of the “T” spectral class 113 T dwarfs discovered extended sequence to Teff ~ 700K

(T8)

diversity of properties beyond Teff sequence apparent gravity? metallicity? dust properties?

Kirkpatrick et al 1999, 2000

Burgasser et al 2006

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Beyond stamp collecting luminosity function of L dwarfs

Cruz et al (2007)

space density of T dwarfs constraining the IMF Allen et al (2005) Metchev et al (2008)

binary statistics (e.g. Burgasser et al 2003) benchmarks (e.g. G570D, HD3651B) weather!!! (e.g. Radigan et al 2012; Buenzli et al

2012)

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Photometric survey exploitation cookbook

Select candidates from survey(s) using colours

Follow-up photometry to remove contaminants

Spectroscopic confirmation

SCIENCE

e.g. z’ – J > 2.5

e.g. scattered M dwarfs;

SSOs

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UKIRT Infrared Deep Sky Survey (UKIDSS)Lawrence et al 2007

UKIDSS consists of 5 surveys

Large Area Survey (LAS) 3600 sq. degs, J = 19.6 2 epoch for ~1500 sq degs

Galactic Plane Survey (GPS) 1800 sq. degs, K=19

Galactic Clusters Survey (GCS) 1400 sq. degs K=18.7

Deep Extragalactic Survey (DXS) 35 sq. degs, K=21.0

Ultra Deep Survey (UDS) 0.77 sq. degs, K=23.0

Casali et al 2007 L5 dwarf @ ~175 pc T5 dwarf @ ~ 110 pc

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171 T dwarfs identified(Lodieu et al 2007; Pinfield et al

2008; Burningham et al (2008, 2009, 2010a,b, 2013)

~70 (+) L dwarfs (Day-Jones et al 2013)

extended T sequence to Teff ~ 500K (Lucas et al 2011)

halo T dwarfs (Smith et al – today!)

more young L dwarfs (see Marocco et al poster)

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CFBDS(IR) ~1000 sq degs in i & z (+NIR sections) early T8+ discovery (CFBDS 0059; Delorme et al

2008) L5 – T8 luminosit function (Reyle et al 2010) extremely cool binary CFBDSIR J1458+1013AB (Liu et

al 2011) planetary mass T dwarf CFBDSIR2149-0403 (Delorme

et al 2012)

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WISE – another leap forwards

all sky

3.4, 4.6, 12, and 22 μm Y dwarfs

(Cushing et al 2011; Kirkpatrick et al 2012)

seriously, Teff ~ 300K brown dwarfs!! halo(?) T dwarfs (Gomes et al –

today!) buckets of bright T dwarfs

(Mace et al 2013)

complementary data facilitating all sorts of cool science with UKIDSS, 2MASS etc

Kirkpatrick et al (2011)

L5 dwarf @ ~80 pc T5 dwarf @ ~ 50 pcY dwarf @ ~12 pc

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WISE vs UKIDSS – FIGHT!

J <18.3 18.3 < J <18.8

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Survey league table

Survey L dwarfs T dwarfs Y dwarfsDENIS 49 1 02MASS 403 55 0SDSS 381 57 0UKIDSS 50 230 0CFBDS(IR) 170(?) 45 1WISE 10 176 14VISTA-VHS 0 5 0

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The immediate futureVISTA:

VISTA Hemisphere Survey (VHS) (Y)J(H)Ks J < 19.6 ~100K L0 – T5 ~2000 late-T dwarfs

VIKING 1500 sq degs ZYJHK J < 21.0

Dark Energy Survey: 4000 sq degs grizy (z < 24.7, y < 23.0)

PanStarrs (+UKIRT Hemisphere Survey): griz (+J) z < 23.0 (+ J < 19.6)

L5 dwarf @ ~330 pc T5 dwarf @ ~200 pc~1 MILLI

ON

BROWN

DWARFS!!!!

…and that’s before LSST

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What’s the point? rare objects:

benchmarks halo T dwarfs/subdwarfs young objects

improved space density scale height for BDs (as a function of spectral

type)

need kinematic data

need to use survey data for more than candidate selection

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Photometric redshifts spectral types

Skrzypek & Warren (poster here!)

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Large scale spectroscopic surveysEUCLID: VIS (<24.5 AB) + YJH (<24 AB) wide imaging survey over

15000 sq deg YJH < 26.5 (AB) over 40 sq degs, slitless spectroscopy (J ~ 19?)

VLT-MOONS (proposed): 500 sq arcminute, 500 object NIR MOS deep survey key element of science case scale height for LT dwarfs c.f SDSS for M dwarfs!

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What do we want next?

proper motions (PanStarrs; LSST; 2nd epoch of VHS !?)

deep spectroscopic survey (VLT-MOONS; EUCLID)

what about photometric surveys?

best colours for characterisation?