Exploring the Brown Dwarf Desert: New Substellar Companions from the SDSS-III MARVELS Survey
astro-ph.SR
/ Authors
Nolan Grieves, Jian Ge, Neil Thomas, Bo Ma, Sirinrat Sithajan, Luan Ghezzi, Ben Kimock, Kevin Willis, Nathan De Lee, Brian Lee
and 20 more authors
Scott W. Fleming, Eric Agol, Nicholas Troup, Martin Paegert, Donald P. Schneider, Keivan Stassun, Frank Varosi, Bo Zhao, Jian Liu, Rui Li, Gustavo F. Porto de Mello, Dmitry Bizyaev, Kaike Pan, Leticia Dutra-Ferreira, Diego Lorenzo-Oliveira, Basilio X. Santiago, Luiz N. da Costa, Marcio A. G. Maia, Ricardo L. C. Ogando, E. F. del Peloso
/ Abstract
Planet searches using the radial velocity technique show a paucity of companions to solar-type stars within ~5 AU in the mass range of ~10 - 80 M$_{\text{Jup}}$. This deficit, known as the brown dwarf desert, currently has no conclusive explanation. New substellar companions in this region help asses the reality of the desert and provide insight to the formation and evolution of these objects. Here we present 10 new brown dwarf and two low-mass stellar companion candidates around solar-type stars from the Multi-object APO Radial-Velocity Exoplanet Large-Area Survey (MARVELS) of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey III (SDSS-III). These companions were selected from processed MARVELS data using the latest University of Florida Two Dimensional (UF2D) pipeline, which shows significant improvement and reduction of systematic errors over previous pipelines. The 10 brown dwarf companions range in mass from ~13 to 76 M$_{\text{Jup}}$ and have orbital radii of less than 1 AU. The two stellar companions have minimum masses of ~98 and 100 M$_{\text{Jup}}$. The host stars of the MARVELS brown dwarf sample have a mean metallicity of [Fe/H] = 0.03 $\pm$ 0.08 dex. Given our stellar sample we estimate the brown dwarf occurrence rate around solar-type stars with periods less than ~300 days to be ~0.56%.