The Solar Neighborhood XXXVII: The Mass-Luminosity Relation for Main Sequence M Dwarfs
G. F. Benedict, T. J. Henry, O. G. Franz, B. E. McArthur, L. H., Wasserman, Wei-Chun Jao, P. A. Cargile, S. B. Dieterich, A. J. Bradley, E. P., Nelan, and A. L. Whipple

TL;DR
This paper establishes a precise Mass-Luminosity Relation for main sequence M dwarfs using high-accuracy dynamical mass measurements, aiding stellar characterization and cosmic mass estimates.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed MLR for M dwarfs based on high-precision astrometric and radial velocity data, covering a broad mass range from 0.62 to 0.08 solar masses.
Findings
Constructed V-band and K-band MLRs with low residuals
Achieved mass measurement precision comparable to eclipsing binaries
Demonstrated applicability for characterizing exoplanet host stars
Abstract
We present a Mass-Luminosity Relation (MLR) for red dwarfs spanning a range of masses from 0.62 Msun to the end of the stellar main sequence at 0.08 Msun. The relation is based on 47 stars for which dynamical masses have been determined, primarily using astrometric data from Fine Guidance Sensors (FGS) 3 and 1r, white-light interferometers on the Hubble Space Telescope (HST), and radial velocity data from McDonald Observatory. For our HST/FGS sample of 15 binaries component mass errors range from 0.4% to 4.0% with a median error of 1.8%. With these and masses from other sources, we construct a V-band MLR for the lower main sequence with 47 stars, and a K-band MLR with 45 stars with fit residuals half of those of the V-band. We use GJ 831 AB as an analysis example, obtaining an absolute trigonometric parallax, pi_abs = 125.3 +/- 0.3 milliseconds of arc, with orbital elements yielding…
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