arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:1410.5442 [astro-ph.SR]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

A Pulsation Search Among Young Brown Dwarfs and Very Low Mass Stars

Ann Marie Cody, Lynne A. Hillenbrand

Published 2014-10-20Version 1

In 2005, Palla & Baraffe proposed that brown dwarfs (BDs) and very low mass stars (VLMSs; <0.1 solar masses) may be unstable to radial oscillations during the pre-main-sequence deuterium burning phase. With associated periods of 1-4 hours, this potentially new class of pulsation offers unprecedented opportunities to probe the interiors and evolution of low-mass objects in the 1-15 million year age range. Following up on reports of short-period variability in young clusters, we designed a high-cadence photometric monitoring campaign to search for deuterium-burning pulsation among a sample of 348 BDs and VLMSs in the four young clusters $\sigma$ Orionis, Chamaeleon I, IC 348, and Upper Scorpius. In the resulting light curves we achieved sensitivity to periodic signals of amplitude several millimagnitudes, on timescales from 15 minutes to two weeks. Despite the exquisite data quality, we failed to detect any periodicities below seven hours. We conclude that D-burning pulsations are not able to grow to observable amplitudes in the early pre-main sequence. In spite of the non-detection, we did uncover a rich set of variability behavior- both periodic and aperiodic- on day to week timescales. We present new compilations of variable sources from our sample, as well as three new candidate cluster members in Chamaeleon I.

Comments: 21 pages, 15 figures; accepted for publication in ApJ
Categories: astro-ph.SR
Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:1610.08798 [astro-ph.SR] (Published 2016-10-27)
2D dynamics of the radiative core of low mass stars
arXiv:1310.7591 [astro-ph.SR] (Published 2013-10-28)
The Mass-Radius Relationship for Very Low Mass Stars: Four New Discoveries from the HATSouth Survey
G. Zhou et al.
arXiv:2207.00405 [astro-ph.SR] (Published 2022-07-01)
Searching for stellar flares from low mass stars using ASKAP and TESS