The Magellan PFS Planet Search Program: Radial Velocity and Stellar Abundance Analyses of the 360 AU, Metal-Poor Binary "Twins" HD 133131A & B
Johanna K. Teske (Carnegie DTM/Obs), Stephen A. Shectman (Carnegie, Obs), Steve S. Vogt (UCO/Lick), Mat\'ias D\'iaz (Universidad de Chile,, Carnegie Obs), R. Paul Butler (Carnegie DTM), Jeffrey D. Crane (Carnegie, Obs), Ian B. Thompson (Carnegie Obs)

TL;DR
This study reports the discovery of multiple long-period planets orbiting a metal-poor binary star system using high-precision radial velocity data, and analyzes stellar abundances to understand planet formation in such environments.
Contribution
First detection of long-period planets around a metal-poor binary star system using Magellan PFS data, with detailed stellar abundance analysis of the twin stars.
Findings
Discovered two eccentric planets around HD 133131A.
Detected one long-period planet around HD 133131B.
Found a 0.03 dex depletion of refractory elements in HD 133131A.
Abstract
We present a new precision radial velocity (RV) dataset that reveals multiple planets orbiting the stars in the 360 AU, G2G2 "twin" binary HD 133131AB. Our 6 years of high-resolution echelle observations from MIKE and 5 years from PFS on the Magellan telescopes indicate the presence of two eccentric planets around HD 133131A with minimum masses of 1.430.03 and 0.630.15 at 1.440.005 and 4.790.92 AU, respectively. Additional PFS observations of HD 133131B spanning 5 years indicate the presence of one eccentric planet of minimum mass 2.500.05 at 6.400.59 AU, making it one of the longest period planets detected with RV to date. These planets are the first to be reported primarily based on data taken with PFS on Magellan, demonstrating the instrument's precision and the advantage of long-baseline RV…
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