We present the results of a 0.86 square degree CCD photometric survey of th
e open cluster NGC 2516, which has an age of about 150 Myr and may have a m
uch lower metallicity than the similarly-aged Pleiades. Our BVIc survey of
cluster members is complete to V similar or equal to 20 and is used to sele
ct a preliminary catalogue of 1254 low mass (0.2<M<2.0 M-circle dot) cluste
r candidates, of which about 70-80 percent are expected to be genuine. Afte
r applying corrections for contamination by non-members and adding data for
higher mass stars from the literature, we investigate the cluster binarity
, luminosity and mass function, mass segregation and total mass. We find a
binary fraction of 26 +/-5 percent, for A to M-type systems with mass ratio
s between 0.6 and 1, which is very similar to the Pleiades. The mass functi
on is metallicity and evolutionary-model dependent, but consistent with a S
alpeter-like law (dN/d log M proportional to M-alpha, alpha = +1.47 +/-0.11
or alpha = +1.67 +/-0.11 for the solar and half-solar metallicity models o
f Siess et al. 2000, and alpha = +1.58 +/-0.10 for the solar metallicity mo
dels of D'Antona & Mazzitelli 1997), for 0.7<M<3.0 M-circle dot. At lower m
asses (0.3<M<0.7 M-circle dot) there is a sharp fall in the mass function,
with alpha = -0.75 +/-0.20 or alpha = -0.49 +/-0.13 (for the solar and half
-solar metallicity models of Siess et al.), and alpha = -1.00 +/-0.18 (for
the solar metallicity models of D'Antona & Mazzitelli). The true stellar ma
ss function might have alpha values up to 0.4 larger if account were taken
of low mass stars in unresolved binary systems with mass ratios less than 0
.6. The falling mass function of NGC 2516 at lower masses seems inconsisten
t with the much flatter mass functions derived from comparable data in the
Pleiades and field populations. This deficit of lower mass, fainter stars i
s also seen in the observed luminosity function. We rule out incompleteness
as the cause of this discrepancy, but demonstrate that mass segregation is
clearly present in NGC 2516, with more than half the low-mass (<0.6 M-<cir
cle dot>) stars likely to lie outside our survey area, but the vast majorit
y of high-mass (>1.5 M-circle dot) stars included. Taking this into account
, it is probable that the whole-cluster mass functions for NGC 2516 and the
Pleiades are similar down to 0.3 M-circle dot. The mass of NGC 2516 stars
with M >0.3 M-circle dot inside our survey is 950-1200 M-circle dot, depend
ing on metallicity and what corrections are applied for unresolved binarity
. Correcting for mass segregation increases this to similar to 1240-1560 M-
circle dot, about twice the total mass of the Pleiades. If NGC 2516 and the
Pleiades do have similar mass functions, then less massive stars and brown
dwarfs contribute about a further 15 percent to the mass of NGC 2516 and w
e predict a cluster population of about 360-440 brown dwarfs with 0.030<M<0
.075 M-circle dot.