A Cautionary Tale: MARVELS Brown Dwarf Candidate Reveals Itself To Be A Very Long Period, Highly Eccentric Spectroscopic Stellar Binary
Claude E. Mack III, Jian Ge, Rohit Deshpande, John P. Wisniewski,, Keivan G. Stassun, B. Scott Gaudi, Scott W. Fleming, Suvrath Mahadevan,, Nathan De Lee, Jason Eastman, Luan Ghezzi, Jonay I. Gonzalez Hernandez, Bruno, Femenia, Leticia Ferreira, Gustavo Porto de Mello

TL;DR
This paper reveals how a highly eccentric, long-period stellar binary can mimic a brown dwarf companion in spectroscopic surveys, emphasizing the importance of careful analysis to avoid false positives in substellar companion detection.
Contribution
It demonstrates that certain binary star configurations can masquerade as brown dwarf companions in spectroscopic data, highlighting the need for improved vetting techniques in RV surveys.
Findings
Binary system mimics brown dwarf signal for 95% of orbit
Large eccentricity causes spectral line blending, hiding true nature
Monitoring spectral line width can prevent false positives
Abstract
We report the discovery of a highly eccentric, double-lined spectroscopic binary star system (TYC 3010-1494-1), comprising two solar-type stars that we had initially identified as a single star with a brown dwarf companion. At the moderate resolving power of the MARVELS spectrograph and the spectrographs used for subsequent radial-velocity (RV) measurements (R ~ <30,000), this particular stellar binary mimics a single-lined binary with an RV signal that would be induced by a brown dwarf companion (Msin(i)~50 M_Jup) to a solar-type primary. At least three properties of this system allow it to masquerade as a single star with a very low-mass companion: its large eccentricity (e~0.8), its relatively long period (P~238 days), and the approximately perpendicular orientation of the semi-major axis with respect to the line of sight (omega~189 degrees). As a result of these properties, for ~95%…
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