SEEDS direct imaging of the RV-detected companion to V450 Andromedae, and characterization of the system
K. G. He{\l}miniak, M. Kuzuhara, K. Mede, T. D. Brandt, R. Kandori, T., Suenaga, N. Kusakabe, N. Narita, J. C. Carson, T. Currie, T. Kudo, J., Hashimoto, L. Abe, E. Akiyama, W. Brandner, M. Feldt, M. Goto, C. A. Grady,, O. Guyon, Y. Hayano, M. Hayashi, S. S. Hayashi, T. Henning

TL;DR
This study combines direct imaging and radial velocity data to characterize a low-mass stellar companion to V450 Andromedae, providing precise mass measurements and insights into the system's age and stellar activity.
Contribution
It presents the first direct imaging detection of a low-mass companion previously identified via radial velocity, with combined astrometry and spectral analysis for detailed characterization.
Findings
Companion is a low-mass star, not a brown dwarf.
Dynamical masses are approximately 1.14 and 0.28 solar masses.
System age estimated at around 380 million years.
Abstract
We report the direct imaging detection of a low-mass companion to a young, moderately active star V450 And, that was previously identified with the radial velocity method. The companion was found in high-contrast images obtained with the Subaru Telescope equipped with the HiCIAO camera and AO188 adaptive optics system. From the public ELODIE and SOPHIE archives we extracted available high-resolution spectra and radial velocity (RV) measurements, along with RVs from the Lick planet search program. We combined our multi-epoch astrometry with these archival, partially unpublished RVs, and found that the companion is a low-mass star, not a brown dwarf, as previously suggested. We found the best-fitting dynamical masses to be and M. We also performed spectral analysis of the SOPHIE spectra with the iSpec code. The Hipparcos…
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