Stellar Companions to the Exoplanet Host Stars HD 2638 and HD 164509
Justin M. Wittrock, Stephen R. Kane, Elliott P. Horch, Lea Hirsch,, Steve B. Howell, David R. Ciardi, Mark E. Everett, Johanna K. Teske

TL;DR
This study used high-resolution imaging to identify and characterize stellar companions to exoplanet host stars HD 2638 and HD 164509, revealing new binary companions and providing their physical properties.
Contribution
First detection of a stellar companion to HD 164509 and detailed characterization of both companions using speckle imaging and stellar models.
Findings
Detected stellar companions at ~0.5-0.7 arcsec separation.
Estimated companion masses around 0.42-0.48 solar masses.
Companions are consistent with late-type M dwarfs.
Abstract
An important aspect of searching for exoplanets is understanding the binarity of the host stars. It is particularly important because nearly half of the solar-like stars within our own Milky Way are part of binary or multiple systems. Moreover, the presence of two or more stars within a system can place further constraints on planetary formation, evolution, and orbital dynamics. As part of our survey of almost a hundred host stars, we obtained images at 692 nm and 880 nm bands using the Differential Speckle Survey Instrument (DSSI) at the Gemini-North Observatory. From our survey, we detect stellar companions to HD 2638 and HD 164509. The stellar companion to HD 2638 has been previously detected, but the companion to HD 164509 is a newly discovered companion. The angular separation for HD 2638 is and for HD 164509 is . This corresponds to…
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