The solar neighborhood LIV: 54 orbits of M dwarf multiples within 30 pc with speckle interferometry at SOAR

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
The solar neighborhood LIV: 54 orbits of M dwarf multiples within 30 pc with speckle interferometry at SOAR
Abstract
Abstract We present 1066 speckle measurements of M dwarf multiples observed over 2021–2024, all taken with HRCam on the Southern Astrophysical Research 4.1 m telescope. Among these, 900 observations resolve companions in 212 pairs, with separations spanning 17 mas to 3 <mml:math xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" overflow="scroll"> <mml:mover accent="true"> <mml:mrow> <mml:mi>.</mml:mi> </mml:mrow> <mml:mrow> <mml:mi>″</mml:mi> </mml:mrow> </mml:mover> </mml:math> 4 and brightness differences ranging from 0 to 4.9 mag in the I filter. We have characterized the orbits of 54 of these companions, spanning periods of 0.67–30 yr, by combining our data with literature astrometry, radial velocities, and, in four cases, Hipparcos–Gaia accelerations. Among the orbits presented here are 28 that are the first-ever such characterizations for their systems and 26 that revise previously published orbits, thus providing a significant update to the observed dynamics of M dwarfs in the solar neighborhood. From these orbits, we provide new and updated dynamical total masses for these systems, precise to 0.7%–7% in nearly all cases. Future mass derivations for components in these systems will contribute to efforts in refining the mass–luminosity relation for the smallest stars and will enhance investigations of age, magnetism, and metallicity effects on luminosities at a given mass.
Publication
The Astronomical Journal
Publisher
Institute of Physics
Date
2026-02-24
Volume
171
Issue
3
Pages
186-186
Citation Key
vrijmoetSolarNeighborhoodLIV2026a
ISSN
0004-6256
Language
en
Citation
Vrijmoet, E., Tokovinin, A., Henry, T., Winters, J., Jao, W., & Horch, E. (2026). The solar neighborhood LIV: 54 orbits of M dwarf multiples within 30 pc with speckle interferometry at SOAR. The Astronomical Journal, 171(3), 186–186. https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ae3b40
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