Multiplicity Among Young Brown Dwarfs and Very Low Mass Stars
Mirza Ahmic, Ray Jayawardhana, Alexis Brandeker, Alexander Scholz,, Marten H. van Kerkwijk, Eduardo Delgado-Donate, Dirk Froebrich

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution near-infrared imaging to investigate the multiplicity of young brown dwarfs and very low mass stars, finding a lower binary frequency compared to higher mass stars and suggesting early disruption of such systems.
Contribution
It provides the largest sample of young VLM objects with high-resolution imaging and offers new insights into their binary properties and evolutionary stability.
Findings
Binary frequency of 11% among VLMOs
Discovery of two new binaries, including one of the widest known
No significant evolution of multiplicity with age
Abstract
Characterizing multiplicity in the very low mass (VLM) domain is a topic of much current interest and fundamental importance. Here we report on a near-IR AO imaging survey of 31 young brown dwarfs and VLM stars, 28 of which are in Chamaeleon I, using the ESO VLT. Our survey is sensitive enough to detect equal mass binaries down to separations of 0.04-0.07" (6-10 AU at 160 pc) and, typically, companions with mass ratios as low as 0.2 outside of 0.2" (~30 AU). We resolve the suspected 0.16" (~26 AU) binary Cha_Halpha 2 and present two new binaries, Hn 13 and CHXR 15, with separations of 0.13" (~20 AU) and 0.30" (~50 AU); the latter is one of the widest VLM systems discovered to date. We do not find companions around the majority of our targets, giving a binary frequency of 11% [+9,-6], thus confirming the trend for a lower binary frequency with decreasing mass. By combining our work with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
