The detection and characterisation of 54 massive companions with the SOPHIE spectrograph -- 7 new brown dwarfs and constraints on the BD desert
F. Kiefer, G. H\'ebrard, J. Sahlmann, S. G. Sousa, T. Forveille, N., Santos, M. Mayor, M. Deleuil, P. A. Wilson, S. Dalal, R. F. D\'iaz, G. W., Henry, J. Hagelberg, M. J. Hobson, O. Demangeon, V. Bourrier, X. Delfosse, L., Arnold, N. Astudillo-Defru, J.-L. Beuzit, I. Boisse

TL;DR
This study used RV and astrometric data from the SOPHIE spectrograph, Hipparcos, and Gaia to discover 12 new brown dwarf candidates, analyze their distribution, and constrain the brown dwarf desert around Sun-like stars.
Contribution
The paper introduces GASTON, a new method combining RV and Gaia astrometry, and provides the first comprehensive statistics of massive companions within 10 au, including 7 new brown dwarfs.
Findings
12 new brown dwarf candidates discovered
Brown dwarf desert shows a drop in detection rate below 80 days
Minimum brown dwarf companion frequency around Sun-like stars is 2.0%
Abstract
Brown-dwarfs are substellar objects with masses intermediate between planets and stars within about 13-80Mjup. While isolated BDs are most likely produced by gravitational collapse in molecular clouds down to masses of a few Mjup, a non-negligible fraction of low-mass companions might be formed through the planet formation channel in protoplanetary disks. The upper mass limit of objects formed within disks is still observationally unknown, the main reason being the strong dearth of BD companions at orbital periods shorter than 10 years, a.k.a. the BD desert. To address this question, we aim at determining the best statistics of secondary companions within the 10-100Mjup range and within 10 au from the primary star, while minimising observational bias. We made an extensive use of the RV surveys of FGK stars below 60pc distance to the Sun and in the northern hemisphere performed with the…
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