Lison Malo
Université de Montréal
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Featured researches published by Lison Malo.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2013
Lison Malo; René Doyon; David Lafrenière; Étienne Artigau; Jonathan Gagné; Frédérique Baron; Adric R. Riedel
We present a new method based on a Bayesian analysis to identify new members of nearby young kinematic groups. The analysis minimally takes into account the position, proper motion, magnitude, and color of a star, but other observables can be readily added (e.g., radial velocity, distance). We use this method to find new young low-mass stars in the β Pictoris and AB Doradus moving groups and in the TW Hydrae, Tucana-Horologium, Columba, Carina, and Argus associations. Starting from a sample of 758 mid-K to mid-M (K5V-M5V) stars showing youth indicators such as Hα and X-ray emission, our analysis yields 214 new highly probable low-mass members of the kinematic groups analyzed. One is in TW Hydrae, 37 in β Pictoris, 17 in Tucana-Horologium, 20 in Columba, 6 in Carina, 50 in Argus, 32 in AB Doradus, and the remaining 51 candidates are likely young but have an ambiguous membership to more than one association. The false alarm rate for new candidates is estimated to be 5% for β Pictoris and TW Hydrae, 10% for Tucana-Horologium, Columba, Carina, and Argus, and 14% for AB Doradus. Our analysis confirms the membership of 58 stars proposed in the literature. Firm membership confirmation of our new candidates will require measurement of their radial velocity (predicted by our analysis), parallax, and lithium 6708 A equivalent width. We have initiated these follow-up observations for a number of candidates, and we have identified two stars (2MASSJ01112542+1526214, 2MASSJ05241914-1601153) as very strong candidate members of the β Pictoris moving group and one strong candidate member (2MASSJ05332558-5117131) of the Tucana-Horologium association; these three stars have radial velocity measurements confirming their membership and lithium detections consistent with young age.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2014
Jonathan Gagné; David Lafrenière; René Doyon; Lison Malo; Étienne Artigau
We present Bayesian Analysis for Nearby Young AssociatioNs II (BANYAN II), a modified Bayesian analysis for assessing the membership of later-than-M5 objects to any of several Nearby Young Associations (NYAs). In addition to using kinematic information (from sky position and proper motion), this analysis exploits 2MASS-WISE color-magnitude diagrams in which old and young objects follow distinct sequences. As an improvement over our earlier work, the spatial and kinematic distributions for each association are now modeled as ellipsoids whose axes need not be aligned with the Galactic coordinate axes, and we use prior probabilities matching the expected populations of the NYAs considered versus field stars. We present an extensive contamination analysis to characterize the performance of our new method. We find that Bayesian probabilities are generally representative of contamination rates, except when a parallax measurement is considered. In this case contamination rates become significantly smaller and hence Bayesian probabilities for NYA memberships are pessimistic. We apply this new algorithm to a sample of 158 objects from the literature that are either known to display spectroscopic signs of youth or have unusually red near-infrared colors for their spectral type. Based on our analysis, we identify 25 objects as new highly probable candidates to NYAs, including a new M7.5 bona fide member to Tucana-Horologium, making it the latest-type member. In addition, we reveal that a known L2γ dwarf is co-moving with a bright M5 dwarf, and we show for the first time that two of the currently known ultra red L dwarfs are strong candidates to the AB Doradus moving group. Several objects identified here as highly probable members to NYAs could be free-floating planetary-mass objects if their membership is confirmed.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2013
P. Delorme; Jonathan Gagné; J. H. Girard; A.-M. Lagrange; G. Chauvin; Marie-Eve Naud; David Lafrenière; René Doyon; Adric R. Riedel; M. Bonnefoy; Lison Malo
Context. Though only a handful of extrasolar planets have been discovered via direct imaging, each of these discoveries had tremendous impact on our understanding of planetary formation, stellar formation and cool atmosphere physics. Aims. Since many of these newly imaged giant planets orbit massive A or even B stars we investigated whether giant planets could be found orbiting low-mass stars at large separations. Methods. We have been conducting an adaptive optic imaging survey to search for planetary-mass companions of young M dwarfs of the solar neigbourhood, to probe dierent initial conditions of planetary formation. Results. We report here the direct imaging discovery of 2MASS J01033563-5515561ABb, a 12-14 MJup companion at a projected separation of 84 AU from a pair of young late M stars, with which it shares proper motion. We also detected a Keplerian-compatible orbital motion. Conclusions. This young L-type object at planet/brown dwarf mass boundary is the rst ever imaged around a binary system at a separation compatible with formation in a disc.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2014
Lison Malo; René Doyon; Gregory A. Feiden; Loic Albert; David Lafrenière; Étienne Artigau; Jonathan Gagné; Adric R. Riedel
Based on high resolution optical spectra obtained with ESPaDOnS at CFHT, we determine fundamental parameters (\Teff, R, \Lbol, \logg\ and metallicity) for 59 candidate members of nearby young kinem ...
The Astronomical Journal | 2014
Adric R. Riedel; Charlie T. Finch; Todd J. Henry; John P. Subasavage; Wei-Chun Jao; Lison Malo; David R. Rodriguez; Russel J. White; Douglas R. Gies; Sergio B. Dieterich; Jennifer G. Winters; Cassy L. Davison; Edmund P. Nelan; Sarah C. Blunt; Kelle L. Cruz; Emily L. Rice; Philip A. Ianna
We present basic observational data and association membership analysis for 45 young and active low-mass stellar systems from the ongoing RECONS photometry and astrometry program at the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory. Most of these systems have saturated X-ray emission (log(Lx/Lbol) > -3.5) based on X-ray fluxes from the ROSAT All-Sky Survey, and many are significantly more luminous than main-sequence stars of comparable color. We present parallaxes and proper motions, Johnson-Kron-Cousins VRI photometry, and multiplicity observations from the CTIOPI program on the CTIO 0.9m telescope. To this we add low-resolution optical spectroscopy and line measurements from the CTIO 1.5m telescope, and interferometric binary measurements from the Hubble Space Telescope Fine Guidance Sensors. We also incorporate data from published sources: JHKs photometry from the 2MASS point source catalog; X-ray data from the ROSAT All-Sky Survey; and radial velocities from literature sources. Within the sample of 45 systems, we identify 21 candidate low-mass pre-main-sequence members of nearby associations, including members of beta Pictoris, TW Hydrae, Argus, AB Doradus, two ambiguous 30 Myr old systems, and one object that may be a member of the Ursa Major moving group. Of the 21 candidate young systems, 14 are newly identified as a result of this work, and six of those are within 25 parsecs of the Sun.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2014
Jonathan Gagné; David Lafrenière; René Doyon; Lison Malo; Étienne Artigau
We present the BANYAN All-Sky Survey (BASS) catalog, consisting of 228 new late-type (M4-L6) candidate members of nearby young moving groups (YMGs) with an expected false-positive rate of ~ 13%. This sample includes 79 new candidate young brown dwarfs and 22 planetary-mass objects. These candidates were identified through the first systematic all-sky survey for late-type low-mass stars and brown dwarfs in YMGs. We cross-matched the 2MASS and ALLWISE catalogs outside of the galactic plane to build a sample of 98 970 potential
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2012
P. Delorme; Jonathan Gagné; Lison Malo; C. Reylé; Étienne Artigau; Loic Albert; T. Forveille; X. Delfosse; F. Allard; D. Homeier
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Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010
C. Reylé; P. Delorme; Chris J. Willott; Loic Albert; X. Delfosse; Thierry Forveille; Étienne Artigau; Lison Malo; Gary J. Hill; René Doyon
M5 dwarfs in the solar neighborhood and calculated their proper motions with typical precisions of 5-15 mas yr
Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2015
Jonathan Gagné; Jacqueline K. Faherty; Kelle L. Cruz; David Lafrenière; René Doyon; Lison Malo; Adam J. Burgasser; Marie-Eve Naud; Étienne Artigau; Sandie Bouchard; John E. Gizis; Loic Albert
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Nature | 2016
J.-F. Donati; C. Moutou; Lison Malo; Clement Baruteau; L. Yu; E. Hébrard; G. A. J. Hussain; Silvia H. P. Alencar; Francois Menard; J. Bouvier; Pascal Petit; Michihiro Takami; René Doyon; A. Collier Cameron
. We selected highly probable candidate members of several YMGs from this sample using the Bayesian Analysis for Nearby Young AssociatioNs II tool (BANYAN II). We used the most probable statistical distances inferred from BANYAN II to estimate the spectral type and mass of these candidate YMG members. We used this unique sample to show tentative signs of mass segregation in the AB Doradus moving group and the Tucana-Horologium and Columba associations. The BASS sample has already been successful in identifying several new young brown dwarfs in earlier publications, and will be of great interest in studying the initial mass function of YMGs and for the search of exoplanets by direct imaging; the input sample of potential close-by