The Solar Neighborhood. XXXIV. A Search for Planets Orbiting Nearby M Dwarfs using Astrometry
John C. Lurie, Todd J. Henry, Wei-Chun Jao, Samuel N. Quinn, Jennifer, G. Winters, Philip A. Ianna, David W. Koerner, Adric R. Riedel, and John P., Subasavage

TL;DR
This study uses long-term astrometric measurements to search for planets around nearby M and K dwarfs, setting upper mass limits on potential companions and ruling out certain brown dwarf and Jovian planets at specific orbital periods.
Contribution
It provides new astrometric data and analysis for 16 nearby stars, establishing limits on undetected planetary and substellar companions, especially around stars with known planets.
Findings
No brown dwarf companions detected around the studied M dwarfs.
Sensitivity to companions as low as 1 Jupiter mass for periods over two years.
Proxima Centauri has no Jovian companions at 2-12 year periods.
Abstract
Astrometric measurements are presented for seven nearby stars with previously detected planets: six M dwarfs (GJ 317, GJ 667C, GJ 581, GJ 849, GJ 876, and GJ 1214) and one K dwarf (BD 10 3166). Measurements are also presented for six additional nearby M dwarfs without known planets, but which are more favorable to astrometric detections of low mass companions, as well as three binary systems for which we provide astrometric orbit solutions. Observations have baselines of three to thirteen years, and were made as part of the RECONS long-term astrometry and photometry program at the CTIO/SMARTS 0.9m telescope. We provide trigonometric parallaxes and proper motions for all 16 systems, and perform an extensive analysis of the astrometric residuals to determine the minimum detectable companion mass for the 12 M dwarfs not having close stellar secondaries. For the six M dwarfs with known…
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