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The Solar Neighborhood XXX: Fomalhaut C

Authors :
Mamajek, Eric E.
Bartlett, Jennifer L.
Seifahrt, Andreas
Henry, Todd J.
Dieterich, Sergio B.
Lurie, John C.
Kenworthy, Matthew A.
Jao, Wei-Chun
Riedel, Adric R.
Subasavage, John P.
Winters, Jennifer G.
Finch, Charlie T.
Ianna, Philip A.
Bean, Jacob
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

LP 876-10 is a nearby active M4 dwarf in Aquarius at a distance of 7.6 pc. The star is a new addition to the 10-pc census, with a parallax measured via the Research Consortium on Nearby Stars (RECONS) astrometric survey on the Small & Moderate Aperture Research Telescope System's (SMARTS) 0.9-m telescope. We demonstrate that the astrometry, radial velocity, and photometric data for LP 876-10 are consistent with the star being a third, bound, stellar component to the Fomalhaut multiple system, despite the star lying nearly 6 degrees away from Fomalhaut A in the sky. The 3D separation of LP 876-10 from Fomalhaut is only 0.77+-0.01 pc, and 0.987+-0.006 pc from TW PsA (Fomalhaut B), well within the estimated tidal radius of the Fomalhaut system (1.9 pc). LP 876-10 shares the motion of Fomalhaut within ~1 km/s, and we estimate an interloper probability of ~10^{-5}. Neither our echelle spectroscopy nor astrometry are able to confirm the close companion to LP 876-10 reported in the Washington Double Star Catalog (WSI 138). We argue that the Castor Moving Group to which the Fomalhaut system purportedly belongs, is likely to be a dynamical stream, and hence membership to the group does not provide useful age constraints for group members. LP 876-10 (Fomalhaut C) has now risen from obscurity to become a rare example of a field M dwarf with well-constrained age (440+-40 Myr) and metallicity. Besides harboring a debris disk system and candidate planet, Fomalhaut now has two of the widest known stellar companions.<br />Comment: 43 pages, 5 figures, AJ, in press, emulateapj version can be downloaded at: http://www.pas.rochester.edu/~emamajek/fomc/index.html

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1310.0764
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-6256/146/6/154