Precise dynamical masses of new directly imaged companions from combining relative astrometry, radial velocities, and Hipparcos-Gaia eDR3 accelerations
E. L. Rickman, E. Matthews, W. Ceva, D. S\'egransan, G. M. Brandt, H., Zhang, T. D. Brandt, T. Forveille, J. Hagelberg, S. Udry

TL;DR
This study combines radial velocities, astrometric data, and direct imaging to precisely determine the masses of long-period stellar companions, enhancing understanding of stellar and substellar mass-luminosity relations.
Contribution
It introduces a method integrating multiple detection techniques to derive model-independent dynamical masses of companions, including new discoveries and updates on known objects.
Findings
Discovered new companions around HD 142234, HD 143616, and HIP 22059.
First direct detection of HD 92987 B.
Updated masses for HD 157338 B and HD 195010 B.
Abstract
Aims. With an observing time span of more than 20 years, the CORALIE radial-velocity survey is able to detect long-term trends in data corresponding to companions with masses and separations accessible to direct imaging. Combining exoplanet detection techniques such as radial velocities from the CORALIE survey, astrometric accelerations from Hipparcos and Gaia eDR3, and relative astrometry from direct imaging, removes the degeneracy of unknown orbital parameters. This allows precise model-independent masses of detected companions to be derived, which provides a powerful tool to test models of stellar and substellar mass-luminosity relations. Methods. Long-term precise Doppler measurements with the CORALIE spectrograph reveal radial-velocity signatures of companions on long-period orbits. The long baseline of radial-velocity data allows the detectability of such companion candidates to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
