Very Low-Mass Stellar and Substellar Companions to Solar-Like Stars from MARVELS I: A Low Mass Ratio Stellar Companion to TYC 4110-01037-1 in a 79-day Orbit
John P. Wisniewski, Jian Ge, Justin R. Crepp, Nathan De Lee, Jason, Eastman, Massimiliano Esposito, Scott W. Fleming, B. Scott Gaudi, Luan, Ghezzi, Jonay I. Gonzalez Hernandez, Brian L. Lee, Keivan G. Stassun, Eric, Agol, Carlos Allende Prieto, Rory Barnes, Dmitry Bizyaev

TL;DR
This study reports the discovery of a low-mass stellar companion to a solar-like star with a 79-day orbit, highlighting its unusual low mass ratio and implications for binary formation theories.
Contribution
It presents the detection and characterization of a low mass ratio stellar companion in a short-period orbit, expanding understanding of binary star systems.
Findings
Companion mass minimum ~98 Jupiter masses.
Orbital period ~79 days with low eccentricity.
System's mass ratio at the low end for such binaries.
Abstract
TYC 4110-01037-1 has a low-mass stellar companion, whose small mass ratio and short orbital period are atypical amongst solar-like (Teff ~< 6000 K) binary systems. Our analysis of TYC 4110-01037-1 reveals it to be a moderately aged (~<5 Gyr) solar-like star having a mass of 1.07 +/- 0.08 MSun and radius of 0.99 +/- 0.18 RSun. We analyze 32 radial velocity measurements from the SDSS-III MARVELS survey as well as 6 supporting radial velocity measurements from the SARG spectrograph on the 3.6m TNG telescope obtained over a period of ~2 years. The best Keplerian orbital fit parameters were found to have a period of 78.994 +/- 0.012 days, an eccentricity of 0.1095 +/- 0.0023, and a semi-amplitude of 4199 +/- 11 m/s. We determine the minimum companion mass (if sin i = 1) to be 97.7 +/- 5.8 MJup. The system's companion to host star mass ratio, >0.087 +/- 0.003, places it at the lowest end of…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
