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Published February 2023 | public
Journal Article

A low-mass companion desert among intermediate-mass visual binaries: The scaled-up counterpart to the brown dwarf desert

Abstract

We present a high-contrast imaging survey of intermediate-mass (1.75–4.5 M_⊙) stars to search the most extreme stellar binaries, i.e. for the lowest mass stellar companions. Using adaptive optics at the Lick and Gemini observatories, we observed 169 stars and detected 24 candidates companions, 16 of which are newly discovered, and all but three are likely or confirmed physical companions. Despite obtaining sensitivity down to the substellar limit for 75 per cent of our sample, we do not detect any companion below 0.3 M_⊙, strongly suggesting that the distribution of stellar companions is truncated at a mass ratio of q_(min) ≳ 0.075. Combining our results with known brown dwarf companions, we identify a low-mass companion desert to intermediate-mass stars in the range 0.02 ≲ q ≲ 0.05, which quantitatively matches the known brown dwarf desert among solar-type stars. We conclude that the formation mechanism for multiple systems operates in a largely scale-invariant manner and precludes the formation of extremely uneven systems, likely because the components of a protobinary accrete most of their mass after the initial cloud fragmentation. Similarly, the mechanism to form 'planetary' (q ≲ 0.02) companions likely scales linearly with stellar mass, probably as a result of the correlation between the masses of stars and their protoplanetary discs. Finally, we predict the existence of a sizable population of brown dwarf companions to low-mass stars and of a rising population of planetary-mass objects towards ≈ 1 M_(Jup) around solar-type stars. Improvements on current instrumentation will test these predictions.

Additional Information

We are grateful to the staff at Lick and Gemini observatories for their support during the execution of our programs and to the Gemini Planet Imager Exoplanet Survey (GPIES) team for support in planning, executing and reducing the GPI data presented here. GD, JTO, PK, and BC acknowledge support from the National Science Foundation (NSF) through grant 1413671, as well as from the UC Berkeley Undergraduate Research Apprentice Program. Based on observations obtained at the international Gemini Observatory, a programme of NSF's National Optical-Infrared Astronomy Research Laboratory (NOIRLab), which is managed by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy (AURA) under a cooperative agreement with the National Science Foundation on behalf of the Gemini Observatory partnership: the National Science Foundation (United States), National Research Council (Canada), Agencia Nacional de Investigación y Desarrollo (Chile), Ministerio de Ciencia, Tecnología e Innovación (Argentina), Ministério da Ciência, Tecnologia, Inovações e Comunicações (Brazil), and Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute (Republic of Korea). This research has made use of data from the European Space Agency (ESA) mission Gaia, processed by the Gaia Data Processing and Analysis Consortium, of the Washington Double Star Catalog maintained at the U.S. Naval Observatory, of data obtained from or tools provided by the portal exoplanet.eu of The Extrasolar Planets Encyclopaedia, and of the SIMBAD data base and Vizier catalogue access tool operated by the Centre de Données Astronomiques de Strasbourg, France.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 24, 2023