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The XMM-Newton Extended Survey of the TMC (XEST) is a large program designed to systematically investigate the X-ray properties of young stellar/substellar objects in the TMC. In particular, the area surveyed by 15 XMM-Newton pointings (of which three are archival observations), supplemented with one archival Chandra observation, allows us to study 17 BDs with M spectral types. Half of this sample (9 out of 17 BDs) is detected; 7 BDs are detected here for the first time in X-rays. We observed a flare from one BD. We confirm several previous findings on BD X-ray activity: a log-log relation between X-ray and bolometric luminosity for stars (with L*<10 Lsun) and BDs detected in X-rays; a shallow log-log relation between X-ray fractional luminosity and mass; a log-log relation between X-ray fractional luminosity and effective temperature; a log-log relation between X-ray surface flux and effective temperature. We find no significant log-log correlation between the X-ray fractional luminosity and EW(Halpha). Accreting and nonaccreting BDs have a similar X-ray fractional luminosity. The median X-ray fractional luminosity of nonaccreting BDs is about 4 times lower than the mean saturation value for rapidly rotating low-mass field stars. Our TMC BDs have higher X-ray fractional luminosity than BDs in the Chandra Orion Ultradeep Project. The X-ray fractional luminosity declines from low-mass stars to M-type BDs, and as a sample, the BDs are less efficient X-ray emitters than low-mass stars. We thus conclude that while the BD atmospheres observed here are mostly warm enough to sustain coronal activity, a trend is seen that may indicate its gradual decline due to the drop in photospheric ionization degree (abridged).
We use the sensitive X-ray data from the Chandra Orion Ultradeep Project (COUP) to study the X-ray properties of 34 spectroscopically-identified brown dwarfs with near-infrared spectral types between M6 and M9 in the core of the Orion Nebula Cluster.
Forty new low mass members with spectral types ranging from M4-M9 have been confirmed in the Orion Molecular Cloud 2/3 region. Through deep, I, z, J, H, K photometry of a 20 x 20 field in OMC 2/3, we selected brown dwarf candidates for follow-up spec
We aim to characterize the U-band variability of young brown dwarfs in the Taurus Molecular Cloud and discuss its origin. We used the XMM-Newton Extended Survey of the Taurus Molecular Cloud, where a sample of 11 young bona fide brown dwarfs (spectra
Aims. The brown dwarf (BD) formation process has not yet been completely understood. To shed more light on the differences and similarities between star and BD formation processes, we study and compare the disk fraction among both kinds of objects ov
The centre of our Galaxy harbours a 4 million solar mass black hole that is unusually quiet: its present X-ray luminosity is more than 10 orders of magnitude less than its Eddington luminosity. The observation of iron fluorescence and hard X-ray emis