Astrometric and photometric monitoring of GQ Lup and its sub-stellar companion
Ralph Neuhaeuser, Markus Mugrauer, Andreas Seifahrt, Tobias Schmidt, (AIU Jena), Nikolaus Vogt (Valparaiso)

TL;DR
This study monitored GQ Lup and its sub-stellar companion over two years, confirming their common proper motion, detecting signs of orbital motion, and measuring their parallaxes, thus providing insights into their physical association and orbit.
Contribution
It provides the first indication of orbital motion and precise astrometric measurements for GQ Lup and its companion, confirming their physical association and refining their distance.
Findings
Confirmed common proper motion of GQ Lup and companion
Detected possible orbital motion with 2-3 mas/yr decrease in separation
Measured parallaxes consistent with Lupus I cloud distance
Abstract
Neuhaeuser et al. (2005) presented direct imaging evidence for a sub-stellar companion to the young T Tauri star GQ Lup. Common proper motion was highly significant, but no orbital motion was detected. Faint luminosity, low gravity, and a late-M/early-L spectral type indicated that the companion is either a planet or a brown dwarf. We have monitored GQ Lup and its companion in order to detect orbital and parallactic motion and variability in its brightness. We also search for closer and fainter companions. We have taken six more images with the VLT Adaptive Optics instrument NACO from May 2005 to Feb 2007, always with the same calibration binary from Hipparcos for both astrometric and photometric calibration. By adding up all the images taken so far, we search for additional companions. The position of GQ Lup A and its companion compared to a nearby non-moving background object varies…
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