An eccentric companion at the edge of the brown dwarf desert orbiting the 2.4 Msun giant star HIP67537
M. I. Jones, R. Brahm, R. A. Wittenmyer, H. Drass, J. S. Jenkins, C., H. F. Melo, J. Vos, P. Rojo

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a rare substellar companion near the brown dwarf boundary orbiting a giant star, providing insights into formation mechanisms and occurrence rates around massive stars.
Contribution
The study presents the detection and characterization of a massive substellar companion in the brown dwarf desert around an intermediate-mass star, expanding understanding of such objects.
Findings
Companion has a minimum mass near the deuterium-burning limit.
Probability of the companion being stellar is less than 7%.
Detection rate in the sample suggests higher formation efficiency in massive disks.
Abstract
We report the discovery of a substellar companion around the giant star HIP67537. Based on precision radial velocity measurements from CHIRON and FEROS high-resolution spectroscopic data, we derived the following orbital elements for HIP67537: msin = 11.1 M, = 4.9 AU and = 0.59. Considering random inclination angles, this object has 65% probability to be above the theoretical deuterium-burning limit, thus it is one of the few known objects in the planet to brown-dwarf transition region. In addition, we analyzed the Hipparcos astrometric data of this star, from which we derived a minimum inclination angle for the companion of 2 deg. This value corresponds to an upper mass limit of 0.3 M, therefore the probability that HIP67537 is stellar in nature is …
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