Discovery of the Exceptionally Short Period Ultracool Dwarf Binary LP 413-53AB
Chih-Chun Hsu, Adam J. Burgasser, Christopher A. Theissen

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of the shortest-period ultracool dwarf binary system, LP 413-53AB, with detailed orbital parameters, providing new insights into the formation and evolution of very-low-mass stellar binaries.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed characterization of an ultra-short-period ultracool dwarf binary, expanding understanding of such systems' properties and evolution.
Findings
Shortest-period ultracool binary discovered to date
Orbital separation of 0.0081-0.0084 au
Likely evolved, non-eclipsing system
Abstract
We report the detection of large-amplitude, rapid radial velocity (RV) variations and line-splitting in high-resolution Keck/NIRSPEC spectra of the M9 dwarf LP 413-53. We attribute these features to binary motion. Analyzing data spanning 15 years, we infer a preliminary orbital period of 0.71061560.0000002 day, an eccentricity of 0.00880.0017, a primary RV semi-amplitude of 23.700.05 km s, and a secondary RV semi-amplitude of 28.410.06 km s, implying a system mass ratio / = 0.83400.0017. These measurements identify LP 413-53 as the shortest-period ultracool binary discovered to date, and one of the smallest separation main sequence binaries known. The position and velocity of the system rule out previously reported membership in the Hyades Moving Group, and indicate that this is likely a pair of evolved…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
