Discovery of a Faint Companion to Alcor Using MMT/AO 5 $\mu$m Imaging
Eric E. Mamajek (1), Matthew A. Kenworthy (2), Philip M. Hinz (2),, Michael R. Meyer (2,3) ((1) University of Rochester, (2) Steward Observatory,, University of Arizona, (3) Institute for Astronomy, ETH Zurich)

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a faint stellar companion to Alcor at 4.8 μm, suggesting Alcor is part of a close sextuple star system, which impacts our understanding of local stellar multiplicity.
Contribution
The discovery of a faint companion to Alcor using M-band imaging and the analysis of its implications for the Alcor-Mizar system as a sextuple star system.
Findings
Detected a faint companion to Alcor at 28 AU separation.
Alcor and Mizar are likely a physically associated sextuplet.
Adding Mizar-Alcor increases the known density of multiple systems nearby.
Abstract
We report the detection of a faint stellar companion to the famous nearby A5V star Alcor (80 UMa). The companion has M-band ( = 4.8 m) magnitude 8.8 and projected separation 1".11 (28 AU) from Alcor. The companion is most likely a low-mass (0.3 \msun) active star which is responsible for Alcor's X-ray emission detected by ROSAT (L 10 erg/s). Alcor is a nuclear member of the Ursa Major star cluster (UMa; d 25 pc, age 0.5 Gyr), and has been occasionally mentioned as a possible distant (709") companion of the stellar quadruple Mizar ( UMa). Comparing the revised Hipparcos proper motion for Alcor with the mean motion for other UMa nuclear members shows that Alcor has a peculiar velocity of 1.1 km/s, which is comparable to the predicted velocity amplitude induced by the newly-discovered companion (1 km/s). Using a…
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