SIMBAD references

2016AJ....152..112M - Astron. J., 152, 112-112 (2016/November-0)

Very low-mass stellar and substellar companions to solar-like stars from MARVELS. VI. A giant planet and a brown dwarf candidate in a close binary system HD 87646.

MA B., GE J., WOLSZCZAN A., MUTERSPAUGH M.W., LEE B., HENRY G.W., SCHNEIDER D.P., MARTIN E.L., NIEDZIELSKI A., XIE J., FLEMING S.W., THOMAS N., WILLIAMSON M., ZHU Z., AGOL E., BIZYAEV D., DA COSTA L.N., JIANG P., FIORENZANO A.F.M., GONZALEZ HERNANDEZ J.I., GUO P., GRIEVES N., LI R., LIU J., MAHADEVAN S., MAZEH T., NGUYEN D.C., PAEGERT M., SITHAJAN S., STASSUN K., THIRUPATHI S., VAN EYKEN J.C., WAN X., WANG J., WISNIEWSKI J.P., ZHAO B. and ZUCKER S.

Abstract (from CDS):

We report the detections of a giant planet (MARVELS-7b) and a brown dwarf (BD) candidate (MARVELS-7c) around the primary star in the close binary system, HD 87646. To the best of our knowledge, it is the first close binary system with more than one substellar circumprimary companion that has been discovered. The detection of this giant planet was accomplished using the first multi-object Doppler instrument (KeckET) at the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) telescope. Subsequent radial velocity observations using the Exoplanet Tracker at the Kitt Peak National Observatory, the High Resolution Spectrograph at the Hobby Eberley telescope, the "Classic" spectrograph at the Automatic Spectroscopic Telescope at the Fairborn Observatory, and MARVELS from SDSS-III confirmed this giant planet discovery and revealed the existence of a long-period BD in this binary. HD 87646 is a close binary with a separation of ∼22 au between the two stars, estimated using the Hipparcos catalog and our newly acquired AO image from PALAO on the 200 inch Hale Telescope at Palomar. The primary star in the binary, HD 87646A, has Teff = 5770 ± 80 K, log g = 4.1 ± 0.1, and [Fe/H] = -0.17 ± 0.08. The derived minimum masses of the two substellar companions of HD 87646A are 12.4 ± 0.7 MJup and 57.0 ± 3.7 MJup. The periods are 13.481 ± 0.001 days and 674 ± 4 days and the measured eccentricities are 0.05 ± 0.02 and 0.50 ± 0.02 respectively. Our dynamical simulations show that the system is stable if the binary orbit has a large semimajor axis and a low eccentricity, which can be verified with future astrometry observations.

Abstract Copyright: © 2016. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

Journal keyword(s): binaries: close - brown dwarfs - planetary systems - planetary systems

VizieR on-line data: <Available at CDS (J/AJ/152/112): table1.dat>

Nomenclature: MARVELS-7 N=1. MARVELS-Na (Nos 7b-7c).

Simbad objects: 14

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