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 Brown dwarf at HIP 81208

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Edasich
dK star
dK star
Edasich


Number of posts : 2295
Location : Tau Ceti g - Mid Latitudes
Registration date : 2008-06-02

Brown dwarf at HIP 81208 Empty
PostSubject: Brown dwarf at HIP 81208   Brown dwarf at HIP 81208 Empty31st May 2023, 3:50 am

BEAST detection of a brown dwarf and a low-mass stellar companion around the young bright B star HIP 81208
https://arxiv.org/abs/2305.19122

Quote :
Recent observations from B-star Exoplanet Abundance Study (BEAST) have illustrated the existence of sub-stellar companions around very massive stars. In this paper, we present the detection of two lower mass companions to a relatively nearby (148.7+1.5−1.3 pc), young (17+3−4 Myr), bright (V=6.632±0.006 mag), 2.58±0.06 M⊙ B9V star HIP 81208 residing in the Sco-Cen association, using the Spectro-Polarimetric High-contrast Exoplanet REsearch (SPHERE) instrument at the Very Large Telescope (VLT) in Chile. Analysis of the photometry obtained gives mass estimates of 67+6−7 MJ for the inner companion and 0.135+0.010−0.013 M⊙ for the outer companion, indicating the former to be most likely a brown dwarf and the latter to be a low-mass star. The system is compact but unusual, as the orbital planes of the two companions are likely close to orthogonal. The preliminary orbital solutions we derived for the system indicate that the star and the two companions are likely in a Kozai resonance, rendering the system dynamically very interesting for future studies.
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Edasich
dK star
dK star
Edasich


Number of posts : 2295
Location : Tau Ceti g - Mid Latitudes
Registration date : 2008-06-02

Brown dwarf at HIP 81208 Empty
PostSubject: Re: Brown dwarf at HIP 81208   Brown dwarf at HIP 81208 Empty4th July 2023, 3:38 am

An imaged 15Mjup companion within a hierarchical quadruple system
https://arxiv.org/abs/2307.01195
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Edasich
dK star
dK star
Edasich


Number of posts : 2295
Location : Tau Ceti g - Mid Latitudes
Registration date : 2008-06-02

Brown dwarf at HIP 81208 Empty
PostSubject: Re: Brown dwarf at HIP 81208   Brown dwarf at HIP 81208 Empty9th July 2023, 1:16 pm

Fit to the topic somehow

A low-mass companion desert among intermediate-mass visual binaries: The scaled-up counterpart to the brown dwarf desert
https://arxiv.org/abs/2211.17209

It discusses about a low-mass companion desert around massive stars. At the same time putative substellar companions are detected at HR 3016, HR 2986 and HD 57411 but these ones rather seem background stars.
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Edasich
dK star
dK star
Edasich


Number of posts : 2295
Location : Tau Ceti g - Mid Latitudes
Registration date : 2008-06-02

Brown dwarf at HIP 81208 Empty
PostSubject: Re: Brown dwarf at HIP 81208   Brown dwarf at HIP 81208 Empty22nd August 2023, 3:54 am

I think that this and other similar detections should be merged into a single topic like "BEAST results" or "finds"

Multiples among B stars in the Scorpius-Centaurus association

Quote :
We discuss the properties of companions to B stars in the Scorpius-Centaurus association (age ~15 Myr, 181 B-stars). We gathered available data combining high contrast imaging samples with evidence of companions from Gaia, from eclipsing binaries, and from spectroscopy. We evaluated the completeness of the binary search and estimated the mass and semi-major axis for all detected companions. These data provide a complete sample of stellar secondaries for separation >3 au, and they are highly informative as to closer companions. We found evidence for 200 companions around 181 stars. The fraction of single star is 15.2\pm 4.1% for stars with M_A>3.5 Msun while it is 31.5\pm 5.9% for lower-mass stars. The median semi-major axis of the orbits of the companions is smaller for B than in A stars, confirming a turn-over previously found for OB stars. The mass distribution of the very wide (a>1000 au) and closer companions is different. Very few companions of massive stars M_A>5.0 Msun have a mass below solar and even fewer are M stars with a semi-major axis <1000 au. The scarcity of low-mass companions extends throughout the whole sample. Most early B stars are in compact systems with massive secondaries, while lower-mass stars are mainly in wider systems with a larger spread in mass ratios. We interpret our results as the formation of secondaries with a semi-major axis <1000 au (about 80% of the total) by fragmentation of the disk of the primary and selective mass accretion on the secondaries. The observed trends with primary mass may be explained by a more prolonged phase of accretion episodes on the disk and by a more effective inward migration. We detected twelve new stellar companions from the BEAST survey and of a new BD companion at 9.6 arcsec from HIP74752 using Gaia data, and we discuss the cases of possible BD and low-mass stellar companions to HIP59173, HIP62058, and HIP64053.
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