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Periodic Optical Variability of Radio Detected Ultracool Dwarfs

Authors :
Harding, Leon K.
Hallinan, Gregg
Boyle, Richard P.
Golden, Aaron
Singh, Navtej
Sheehan, Brendan
Zavala, Robert T.
Butler, Ray F.
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

A fraction of very low mass stars and brown dwarfs are known to be radio active, in some cases producing periodic pulses. Extensive studies of two such objects have also revealed optical periodic variability and the nature of this variability remains unclear. Here we report on multi-epoch optical photometric monitoring of six radio detected dwarfs, spanning the $\sim$M8 - L3.5 spectral range, conducted to investigate the ubiquity of periodic optical variability in radio detected ultracool dwarfs. This survey is the most sensitive ground-based study carried out to date in search of periodic optical variability from late-type dwarfs, where we obtained 250 hours of monitoring, delivering photometric precision as low as $\sim$0.15%. Five of the six targets exhibit clear periodicity, in all cases likely associated with the rotation period of the dwarf, with a marginal detection found for the sixth. Our data points to a likely association between radio and optical periodic variability in late-M/early-L dwarfs, although the underlying physical cause of this correlation remains unclear. In one case, we have multiple epochs of monitoring of the archetype of pulsing radio dwarfs, the M9 TVLM 513-46546, spanning a period of 5 years, which is sufficiently stable in phase to allow us to establish a period of 1.95958 $\pm$ 0.00005 hours. This phase stability may be associated with a large-scale stable magnetic field, further strengthening the correlation between radio activity and periodic optical variability. Finally, we find a tentative spin-orbit alignment of one component of the very low mass binary LP 349-25.<br />Comment: Accepted to The Astrophysical Journal; 22 pages; 12 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1310.1367
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/779/2/101