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        High-Precision Radio and Infrared Astrometry of LSPM J1314+1320AB - I : Parallax, Proper Motions, and Limits on Planets

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        Forbrich_2016_ApJ_827_22.pdf (PDF, 1Mb)
        Author
        Forbrich, Jan
        Dupuy, Trent J.
        Reid, Mark J.
        Berger, Edo
        Rizzuto, Aaron
        Mann, Andrew W.
        Liu, Michael C.
        Aller, Kimberly
        Kraus, Adam L.
        Attention
        2299/18223
        Abstract
        We present multi-epoch astrometric radio observations with the Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) of the young ultracool-dwarf binary LSPM J1314+1320AB . The radio emission comes from the secondary star. Combining the VLBA data with Keck near-infrared adaptive-optics observations of both components, a full astrometric fit of parallax ($\pi_{\rm abs}=57.975\pm0.045$ mas, corresponding to a distance of $d=17.249\pm0.013$ pc), proper motion ($\mu_{\rm \alpha cos \delta}=-247.99\pm0.10$ mas yr$^{-1}$, $\mu_{\delta}=-183.58\pm0.22$ mas yr$^{-1}$), and orbital motion is obtained. Despite the fact that the two components have nearly identical masses to within $\pm2$%, the secondary's radio emission exceeds that of the primary by a factor of $\gtrsim$30, suggesting a difference in stellar rotation history, which could result in different magnetic field configurations. Alternatively, the emission could be anisotropic and beamed toward us for the secondary but not for the primary. Using only reflex motion, we exclude planets of mass 0.7 to 10 $M_{\rm jup}$ with orbital periods of 600 to 10 days, respectively. Additionally, we use the full orbital solution of the binary to derive an upper limit for the semi-major axis of 0.23 AU for stable planetary orbits within this system. These limits cover a parameter space that is inaccessible with, and complementary to, near-infrared radial velocity surveys of ultracool dwarfs. Our absolute astrometry will constitute an important test for the astrometric calibration of Gaia.
        Publication date
        2016-08-03
        Published in
        The Astrophysical Journal
        Published version
        https://doi.org/10.3847/0004-637X/827/1/22
        Other links
        http://hdl.handle.net/2299/18223
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