Binary frequency of planet-host stars at wide separations: A new brown dwarf companion to a planet-host star
N. Lodieu (1,2), A. Perez-Garrido (3), V. J. S. Bejar (1,2), B. Gauza, (1,2), M. T. Ruiz (4), R. Rebolo (1,2,5), D. J. Pinfield (6), and E. L., Martin (7) ((1) IAC, Tenerife, Spain, (2) ULL, Tenerife, Spain, (3), Cartagena, Spain, (4) Universidad de Chile, Chile, (5) CSIC, Spain

TL;DR
This study investigates the wide-separation multiplicity of planet-host stars, discovering new companions including a brown dwarf, and finds binary frequencies comparable to non-planet-host stars, contributing to understanding stellar and planetary system formation.
Contribution
It presents the first spectroscopic confirmation of wide companions to planet-host stars, including a new brown dwarf, and provides binary frequency estimates at wide separations.
Findings
Discovered a T4.5 brown dwarf companion at ~9000 au.
Binary frequency for wide companions is ~5.4%.
No significant difference in binary frequency compared to non-planet-host stars.
Abstract
The aim of the project is to improve our knowledge on the multiplicity of planet-host stars at wide physical separations. We cross-matched approximately 6200 square degree area of the Southern sky imaged by the Visible Infrared Survey Telescope for Astronomy (VISTA) Hemisphere Survey (VHS) with the Two Micron All Sky Survey (2MASS) to look for wide common proper motion companions to known planet-host stars. We complemented our astrometric search with photometric criteria. We confirmed spectroscopically the co-moving nature of seven sources out of 16 companion candidates and discarded eight, while the remaining one stays as a candidate. Among these new wide companions to planet-host stars, we discovered a T4.5 dwarf companion at 6.3 arcmin (~9000 au) from HIP70849, a K7V star which hosts a 9 Jupiter mass planet with an eccentric orbit. We also report two new stellar M dwarf…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
