Full bibliography
Fundamental Stellar Parameters and Multiplicity Rates of M-Dwarfs through Optical Speckle and NIR AO Imaging
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Hahne, Frederick (Author)
- Horch, Elliott (Author)
- Ciardi, David R. (Author)
- van Belle, Gerard (Author)
- Clark, Catherine (Author)
- Winters, Jennifer (Author)
- Henry, Todd J. (Author)
Title
Fundamental Stellar Parameters and Multiplicity Rates of M-Dwarfs through Optical Speckle and NIR AO Imaging
Abstract
We present preliminary fundamental stellar parameters and multiplicity rates of M dwarf stars using a combination of speckle imaging and adaptive optics. Our survey mainly uses the Differential Speckle Survey Instrument (DSSI) at Lowell Observatory's Discovery Channel Telescope (DCT). DSSI observes speckle patterns simultaneously at two separate wavelengths and the data for this project are composed of observations which span from 2016 to 2018. More recently, the speckle data for some of the target stars that have been found to be binary have been supplemented with observations using Adaptive Optics (AO) at Palomar Observatory. The combination of speckle data in the visible and AO data in the near-infrared allows us to make robust determinations of the luminosities and effective temperatures of the components in each case. Using the known Mass-Luminosity Relation, we also estimate the component masses. A discussion of interesting systems will be given.
Publication
Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society
Date
2019-06-01
Volume
51
Issue
4
Pages
303.01
Citation Key
hahneFundamentalStellarParameters2019
Accessed
11/8/23, 7:44 PM
Library Catalog
NASA ADS
Extra
Conference Name: American Astronomical Society Meeting Abstracts #234
ADS Bibcode: 2019AAS...23430301H
Citation
Hahne, F., Horch, E., Ciardi, D. R., van Belle, G., Clark, C., Winters, J., & Henry, T. J. (2019). Fundamental Stellar Parameters and Multiplicity Rates of M-Dwarfs through Optical Speckle and NIR AO Imaging. Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society, 51(4), 303.01. https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2019AAS...23430301H
Link to this record