Astrometric confirmation of young low-mass binaries and multiple systems in the Chamaeleon star-forming regions
N. Vogt (1,2), T. O. B. Schmidt (3), R. Neuh\"auser (3), A. Bedalov, (4), T. Roell (3), A. Seifahrt (5,6), M. Mugrauer (3) ((1) Departamento de, F\'isica y Astronom\'ia, Valpara\'iso, Chile, (2) Universidad Catolica del, Norte, Antofagasta, Chile

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution astrometry to confirm multiple star systems in the Chamaeleon star-forming region, revealing their orbital characteristics and confirming their gravitational bonds.
Contribution
It provides the first astrometric confirmation of multiple systems in Chamaeleon and analyzes their orbital motions using multi-epoch observations.
Findings
All suggested close components are co-moving.
13 stars are binaries, 3 are higher-order multiples.
Orbital periods range from 60 to 550 years.
Abstract
The star-forming regions in Chamaeleon are one of the nearest (distance ~165 pc) and youngest (age ~2 Myrs) conglomerates of recently formed stars and the ideal target for population studies of star formation. We investigate a total of 16 Cha targets, which have been suggested, but not confirmed as binaries or multiple systems in previous literature. We used the adaptive optics instrument Naos-Conica (NACO) at the Very Large Telescope Unit Telescope 4 of the Paranal Observatory, at 2-5 different epochs, in order to obtain relative and absolute astrometric measurements, as well as differential photometry in the J, H, and K band. On the basis of known proper motions and these observations, we analyse the astrometric results in our "Proper Motion Diagram" (PMD: angular separation / position angle versus time), to eliminate possible (non-moving) background stars, establish co-moving…
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.
