Mugrauer, M., Neuhäuser, R., Guenther, E. W., Hatzes, A. P., Huélamo, N., Fernández, M., Ammler, M., Retzlaff, J., König, B., Charbonneau, D., Jayawardhana, R., and Brandner, W.
Astronomy and Astrophysics, v.417, p.1031-1038 (2004)
04/2004
We present the first results from our search for close stellar and sub-stellar companions to young nearby stars on the northern sky. Our infrared imaging observations are obtained with the 3.5 m Calar Alto telescope and the AO system ALFA. With two epoch observations which were separated by about one year, we found two co-moving companion candidates, one close to HD 77407 and one close to GJ 577. For the companion candidate near GJ 577, we obtained an optical spectrum showing spectral type M 4.5; this candidate is a bound low-mass stellar companion confirmed by both proper motion and spectroscopy. We estimate the masses for HD 77407 B and GJ 577 B to be ˜0.3 to 0.5 Msun and ˜0.16 to 0.2 Msun, respectively. Compared to Siess et al. (\cite{Siess2000}) models, each of the two pairs appears co-eval with HD 77407 A, B being 10 to 40 Myrs and GJ 577 A, B being ≥100 Myrs old. We also took multi-epoch high-resolution spectra of HD 77407 to search for sub-stellar companions, but did not find any with 3 MJup as upper mass (m sin i) limit (for up to 4 year orbits); however, we detected a long-term radial velocity trend in HD 77407 A, consistent with a ˜0.3 Msun companion at ˜50 AU separation, i.e. the one detected by the imaging. Hence, HD 77407 B is confirmed to be a bound companion to HD 77407 A. We also present limits for undetected, but detectable companions using a deep image of HD 77407 A and B, also observed with the Keck NIRC2 AO system; any brown dwarfs were detectable outside of 0.5 arcsec (17 AU at HD 77407), giant planets with masses from ˜6.5 to 12 MJup were detectable at ≥1.5 arcsec.