Before the 2-Micron All-Sky Survey (2MASS) began, only six objects were known with spectral types later than M9.5 V. In the Ðrst 371 deg2 of actual 2MASS survey data, we have identiÐed another 20 such objects spectroscopically conÐrmed using the Low Resolution Imaging Spectrograph (LRIS) at the W. M. Keck Observatory. Because the TiO and VO bands, which dominate the far-optical portions of late-M spectra, disappear in these cooler dwarfs, we deÐne a new spectral class "" L ÏÏ in which metallic oxides are replaced by metallic hydrides and neutral alkali metals as the major spectroscopic signatures. We establish classiÐcation indices and type all 25 L dwarfs. The 26th "" post-M9.5 ÏÏ objectÈGl 229BÈis the prototype of a methane-dominated spectral class, which we propose as class "" T.ÏÏ At least Ðve of the 20 2MASS L dwarfs show the 6708 lithium doublet at low resolution, the strongest having an equiva-A lent width of 18.5For objects this cool, the presence of lithium proves that they are substellar. Two A . other 2MASS objects appear to have lithium lines at the limit of our detectability, which if veriÐed means that at least one-third of our L dwarfs are bona Ðde brown dwarfs. All of the 2MASS brown dwarfs discovered so far haveWe have not yet, despite deliberately searching for them, J[K s [1.30. found any brown dwarfs with colors resembling Gl 229B (J[K s B[0.1).
The Infrared Array Camera (IRAC) is one of three focal plane instruments in the Spitzer Space Telescope. IRAC is a four-channel camera that obtains simultaneous broad-band images at 3.6, 4.5, 5.8, and 8.0 µm. Two nearly adjacent 5.2×5.2 arcmin fields of view in the focal plane are viewed by the four channels in pairs (3.6 and 5.8 µm; 4.5 and 8 µm). All four detector arrays in the camera are 256×256 pixels in size, with the two shorter wavelength channels using InSb and the two longer wavelength channels using Si:As IBC detectors. IRAC is a powerful survey instrument because of its high sensitivity, large field of view, and four-color imaging. This paper summarizes the in-flight scientific, technical, and operational performance of IRAC.
We present JHK s photometry, far red spectra, and spectral classifications for an additional 67 L dwarfs discovered by the Two Micron All Sky Survey. One of the goals of this new search was to locate more examples of the latest L dwarfs. Of the 67 new discoveries, 17 have types of L6 or later. Analysis of these new discoveries shows that Hα emission has yet to be convincingly detected in any L dwarf later than type L4.5, indicating a decline or absence of chromospheric activity in the latest L dwarfs. Further analysis shows that 16 (and possibly 4 more) of the new L dwarfs are lithium brown dwarfs and that the average line strength for those L dwarfs showing lithium increases until type ∼L6.5 V then declines for later types. This disappearance may be the first sign of depletion of atomic lithium as it begins to form into lithium-bearing molecules. Another goal of the search was to locate nearer, brighter L dwarfs of all subtypes. Using absolute magnitudes for 17 L dwarf systems with trigonometric parallax measurements, we develop spectrophotometric relations to estimate distances to the other L dwarfs. Of the 67 new discoveries, 21 have photometric distances placing them within 25 parsecs of the Sun. A table of all known L and T dwarfs believed to lie within 25 parsecs -53 in total -is also presented. Using the distance measurement -2of the coolest L dwarf known, we calculate that the gap in temperature between L8 and the warmest known T dwarfs is less than 350K and probably much less. If the transition region between the two classes spans a very small temperature interval, this would explain why no transition objects have yet been uncovered. This evidence, combined with model fits to low-resolution spectra of late-M and early-L dwarfs, indicates that L-class objects span the range 1300K ∼ < T ef f ∼ < 2000K. The near-infrared color-color diagram shows that L dwarfs fall along a natural, redder extension of the well known M dwarf track. These near-infrared colors get progressively redder for later spectral types, with the L dwarf sequence abruptly ending near (J − H, H − K s , J − K s ) ≈ (1.3, 0.8, 2.1).
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