Very Low-mass Stellar and Substellar Companions to Solar-like Stars from MARVELS II: A Short-period Companion Orbiting an F Star with Evidence of a Stellar Tertiary And Significant Mutual Inclination
Scott W. Fleming, Jian Ge, Rory Barnes, Thomas G. Beatty, Justin R., Crepp, Nathan De Lee, Massimiliano Esposito, Bruno Femenia, Leticia Ferreira,, Bruce Gary, B. Scott Gaudi, Luan Ghezzi, Jonay I. Gonz\'alez Hern\'andez,, Leslie Hebb, Peng Jiang, Brian Lee, Ben Nelson

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a short-period companion to an F-type star, with evidence of a tertiary stellar companion and mutual inclination, providing insights into the system's dynamical evolution and tidal interactions.
Contribution
It presents the detection and characterization of a close-in companion and a tertiary star, highlighting the system's inclination and potential Kozai-Lidov mechanism influence.
Findings
Inner companion likely stellar with 0.3-0.4 M_sun
Tertiary companion possibly 0.5-0.6 M_sun with inclined orbit
System shows evidence of tidal locking and mutual inclination
Abstract
We report the discovery via radial velocity of a short-period (P = 2.430420 \pm 0.000006 days) companion to the F-type main sequence star TYC 2930-00872-1. A long-term trend in the radial velocities indicates the presence of a tertiary stellar companion with days. High-resolution spectroscopy of the host star yields T_eff = 6427 +/- 33 K, log(g) = 4.52 +/- 0.14, and [Fe/H]=-0.04 +/- 0.05. These parameters, combined with the broad-band spectral energy distribution and parallax, allow us to infer a mass and radius of the host star of M_1=1.21 +/- 0.08 M_\odot and R_1=1.09_{-0.13}^{+0.15} R_\odot. We are able to exclude transits of the inner companion with high confidence. The host star's spectrum exhibits clear Ca H and K core emission indicating stellar activity, but a lack of photometric variability and small v*sin(I) suggest the primary's spin axis is oriented in a pole-on…
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