Lucky Imaging survey for southern M dwarf binaries
C. Bergfors, W. Brandner, M. Janson, S. Daemgen, K. Geissler, T., Henning, S. Hippler, F. Hormuth, V. Joergens, R. K\"ohler

TL;DR
This survey uses Lucky Imaging to study binary properties of southern M dwarfs, revealing a 32% multiplicity rate and trends in separation and mass ratio across spectral types, providing insights into low-mass star formation.
Contribution
It presents the largest M dwarf binary survey to date, identifying new companions and analyzing their properties with high-resolution imaging, improving understanding of low-mass star multiplicity.
Findings
Multiplicity fraction of 32% for M dwarfs within 52 pc.
Most binaries have separations smaller than 1 arcsec.
Later type M dwarfs tend to have closer and more equal-mass binaries.
Abstract
While M dwarfs are the most abundant stars in the Milky Way, there is still large uncertainty about their basic physical properties (mass, luminosity, radius, etc.) as well as their formation environment. Precise knowledge of multiplicity characteristics and how they change in this transitional mass region, between Sun-like stars on the one side and very low mass stars and brown dwarfs on the other, provide constraints on low mass star and brown dwarf formation. In the largest M dwarf binary survey to date, we search for companions to active, and thus preferentially young, M dwarfs in the solar neighbourhood. We study their binary/multiple properties, such as the multiplicity frequency and distributions of mass ratio and separation, and identify short period visual binaries, for which orbital parameters and hence dynamical mass estimates can be derived in the near future. The…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
