Exploring the Brown Dwarf Desert with Precision Radial Velocities and Gaia DR3 Astrometric Orbits
N. Unger, D. S\'egransan, D. Barbato, J.-B. Delisle, J. Sahlmann, B., Holl, S. Udry

TL;DR
This study combines Gaia DR3 astrometric data with radial velocity measurements to accurately determine the true masses of substellar companions, refining the brown dwarf desert statistics and improving understanding of their formation around solar-type stars.
Contribution
It introduces a method integrating Gaia DR3 astrometry with radial velocities to accurately classify companions and reassess the brown dwarf occurrence rate around solar-type stars.
Findings
Reclassified several brown dwarf candidates as low-mass stars.
Achieved more precise mass estimates for 32 companions.
Estimated a brown dwarf occurrence rate of approximately 0.8%.
Abstract
Context. The observed scarcity of brown dwarfs in close orbits (within 10 au) around solar-type stars poses significant questions about the origins of these substellar companions. These questions impact our broader understanding of planetary formation processes. However, to resolve these formation mechanisms, accurate observational constraints are essential. Most of the brown dwarfs have been discovered by radial velocity surveys, but this method introduces uncertainties due to its inability to determine the orbital inclination, leaving the true mass-and thus their true nature-unresolved. This highlights the crucial role of astrometric data, helping us distinguish between genuine brown dwarfs and stars. Aims. We aim to refine the mass estimates of massive companions to solar-type stars, mostly discovered through radial velocity measurements and subsequently validated using Gaia DR3…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Inertial Sensor and Navigation
