The Small Separation A-Star Companion Population: First Results with CHARA/MIRC-X
Matthew De Furio, Tyler Gardner, John Monnier, Michael R. Meyer,, Kaitlin Kratter, Gail Schaefer, Narsireddy Anugu, Claire L. Davies, Stefan, Kraus, Cyprien Lanthermann, Jean-Baptiste Le Bouquin, Jacob Ennis

TL;DR
This study uses long-baseline interferometry to investigate the close companion population of intermediate-mass A-type stars within 80 parsecs, revealing new companions and challenging existing models of stellar multiplicity.
Contribution
First application of LBI with MIRC-X to detect close companions of A-type stars, providing new data on their multiplicity at separations below 10 au.
Findings
Detected 5 companions, 3 new, around A-type stars.
Derived a companion frequency of 0.19 with uncertainties.
Results are inconsistent with previous models, indicating more complex formation processes.
Abstract
We present preliminary results from our long-baseline interferometry (LBI) survey to constrain the multiplicity properties of intermediate-mass A-type stars within 80pc. Previous multiplicity studies of nearby stars exhibit orbital separation distributions well-fitted with a log-normal with peaks > 15au, increasing with primary mass. The A-star multiplicity survey of De Rosa et al. (2014), sensitive beyond 30au but incomplete below 100 au, found a log-normal peak around 390au. Radial velocity surveys of slowly-rotating, chemically peculiar Am stars identified a significant number of very close companions with periods 5 days, ~ 0.1au, a result similar to surveys of O- and B-type primaries. With the improved performance of LBI techniques, we can probe these close separations for normal A-type stars where other surveys are incomplete. Our initial sample consists of 27 A-type…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
