# Direct Imaging Explorations for Companions around Mid-Late M Stars from   the Subaru/IRD Strategic Program

**Authors:** Taichi Uyama, Charles Beichman, Masayuki Kuzuhara, Markus Janson,, Takayuki Kotani, Dimitri Mawet, Bun'ei Sato, Motohide Tamura, Hiroyuki Tako, Ishikawa, Bryson Cale, Thayne Currie, Hiroki Harakawa, Thomas Henning,, Teruyuki Hirano, Klaus Hodapp, Yasunori Hori, Masato Ishizuka, Shane, Jacobson, Yui Kasagi, Eiichiro Kokubo, Mihoko Konishi, Tomoyuki Kudo, Takashi, Kurokawa, Nobuhiko Kusakabe, Jungmi Kwon, Masahiro Machida, Takao Nakagawa,, Norio Narita, Jun Nishikawa, Masahiro Ogihara, Masashi Omiya, Takuma, Serizawa, Akitoshi Ueda, Sebastien Vievard, Ji Wang

arXiv: 2302.13354 · 2023-03-29

## TL;DR

This study used Keck/NIRC2 high-contrast imaging to search for companions around mid-late M stars from Subaru/IRD survey, discovering several new stellar companions and setting limits on substellar objects, informing future exoplanet and stellar multiplicity research.

## Contribution

First high-contrast imaging survey targeting IRD-SSP mid-late M stars, identifying new stellar companions and establishing detection limits for substellar objects.

## Key findings

- Detected 7 companions, including 4 new ones, within 2-20 au.
- Identified boundary spectral types for some companions.
- No additional companions found in non-detected targets.

## Abstract

The Subaru telescope is currently performing a strategic program (SSP) using the high-precision near-infrared (NIR) spectrometer IRD to search for exoplanets around nearby mid/late-M~dwarfs via radial velocity (RV) monitoring. As part of the observing strategy for the exoplanet survey, signatures of massive companions such as RV trends are used to reduce the priority of those stars. However, this RV information remains useful for studying the stellar multiplicity of nearby M~dwarfs. To search for companions around such ``deprioritized" M~dwarfs, we observed 14 IRD-SSP targets using Keck/NIRC2 observations with pyramid wavefront sensing at NIR wavelengths, leading to high sensitivity to substellar-mass companions within a few arcseconds. We detected two new companions (LSPM~J1002+1459~B and LSPM~J2204+1505~B) and two new candidates that are likely companions (LSPM~J0825+6902~B and LSPM~J1645+0444~B) as well as one known companion. Including two known companions resolved by the IRD fiber injection module camera, we detected seven (four new) companions at projected separations between $\sim2-20$~au in total. A comparison of the colors with the spectral library suggests that LSPM~J2204+1505~B and LSPM~J0825+6902~B are located at the boundary between late-M and early-L spectral types. Our deep high-contrast imaging for targets where no bright companions were resolved did not reveal any additional companion candidates. The NIRC2 detection limits could constrain potential substellar-mass companions ($\sim10-75\ M_{\rm Jup}$) at 10~au or further. The failure with Keck/NIRC2 around the IRD-SSP stars having significant RV trends makes these objects promising targets for further RV monitoring or deeper imaging with JWST to search for smaller-mass companions below the NIRC2 detection limits.

## Full text

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## Figures

19 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/2302.13354/full.md

## References

73 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/2302.13354/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/2302.13354