A Mass-Magnitude Relation for Low-mass Stars Based on Dynamical Measurements of Thousands of Binary Star Systems
Mark R. Giovinazzi, Cullen H. Blake

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new statistical method using Gaia data to establish a Mass-Magnitude relation for low-mass stars, enabling mass estimates for millions of stars and insights into the stellar mass function and binary mass ratios.
Contribution
The study presents a novel Gaia-based statistical approach to derive a Mass-Magnitude relation for low-mass stars, improving mass estimation accuracy and applicability to large stellar populations.
Findings
Mass-Magnitude relation spans 0.08-1.0 M_sun.
Mass estimates have ~10% internal precision.
Field mass function peaks at 0.16 M_sun.
Abstract
Stellar mass is a fundamental parameter that is key to our understanding of stellar formation and evolution, as well as the characterization of nearby exoplanet companions. Historically, stellar masses have been derived from long-term observations of visual or spectroscopic binary star systems. While advances in high-resolution imaging have enabled observations of systems with shorter orbital periods, stellar mass measurements remain challenging, and relatively few have been precisely measured. We present a new statistical approach to measuring masses for populations of stars. Using Gaia astrometry, we analyze the relative orbital motion of wide binary systems comprising low-mass stars to establish a Mass-Magnitude relation in the Gaia band spanning the absolute magnitude range , corresponding to a mass range of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
