4.6 Article

THE SOLAR NEIGHBORHOOD. XXVIII. THE MULTIPLICITY FRACTION OF NEARBY STARS FROM 5 TO 70 AU AND THE BROWN DWARF DESERT AROUND M DWARFS

Journal

ASTRONOMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 144, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-6256/144/2/64

Keywords

binaries: close; brown dwarfs; infrared: stars; solar neighborhood; stars: low-mass; stars: statistics

Funding

  1. NASA from the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) [HST-GO-07420, HST-GO-07894, HST-GO-09485]
  2. Division Of Astronomical Sciences
  3. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [908402] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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We report on our analysis of Hubble Space Telescope/NICMOS snapshot high-resolution images of 255 stars in 201 systems within similar to 10 pc of the Sun. Photometry was obtained through filters F110W, F180M, F207M, and F222M using NICMOS Camera 2. These filters were selected to permit clear identification of cool brown dwarfs through methane contrast imaging. With a plate scale of 76 mas pixel(-1), NICMOS can easily resolve binaries with subarcsecond separations in the 19 '' 5 x 19 '' 5 field of view. We previously reported five companions to nearby M and L dwarfs from this search. No new companions were discovered during the second phase of data analysis presented here, confirming that stellar/substellar binaries are rare. We establish magnitude and separation limits for which companions can be ruled out for each star in the sample, and then perform a comprehensive sensitivity and completeness analysis for the subsample of 138 M dwarfs in 126 systems. We calculate a multiplicity fraction of 0.0(-0.0)(+3.5)% for L companions to M dwarfs in the separation range of 5-70 AU, and 2.3(-0.7)(+5.0)% for L and T companions to M dwarfs in the separation range of 10- 70 AU. We also discuss trends in the color-magnitude diagrams using various color combinations and present astrometry for 19 multiple systems in our sample. Considering these results and results from several other studies, we argue that the so-called brown dwarf desert extends to binary systems with low-mass primaries and is largely independent of primary mass, mass ratio, and separations. While focusing on companion properties, we discuss how the qualitative agreement between observed companion mass functions and initial mass functions suggests that the paucity of brown dwarfs in either population may be due to a common cause and not due to binary formation mechanisms.

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