Bibcode
Lodieu, N.; Zapatero Osorio, M. R.; Martín, E. L.
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 499, Issue 3, 2009, pp.729-736
Advertised on:
6
2009
Journal
Citations
23
Refereed citations
20
Description
Context: The knowledge of the binary properties of metal-poor and
solar-metallicity stars can shed light on the potential differences
between the formation processes responsible for both types of objects.
Aims: The aim of the project is to determine the binary properties
(separation, mass ratio, frequency of companions) for M subdwarfs, the
low-metallicity counterparts of field M dwarfs, and investigate any
potential differences between both populations. Methods: We have
obtained high-resolution imaging in the optical for a sample of 24
early-M subdwarfs and nine extreme subdwarfs with the “Lucky
Imaging” technique using the AstraLux instrument on the Calar Alto
2.2-m telescope. Results: We are sensitive to companions at
separations larger than 0.1 arcsec and differences of ~2 mag at 0.1
arcsec and ~5 mag at 1 arcsec. We have found no companion around the 24
subdwarfs under study and one close binary out of nine extreme
subdwarfs. A second image of LHS 182 taken three months later with the
same instrument confirms the common proper motion of the binary
separated by about 0.7 arcsec. Moreover, we do not confirm the common
proper motion of the faint source reported by Riaz and collaborators at
~2 arcsec from LHS 1074. Conclusions: We derive a binary
frequency of 3±3% for M subdwarfs from our sample of 33 objects
for separations larger than about five astronomical units. Adding to our
sample the additional 28 metal-poor early-M dwarfs observed with the
Hubble Space Telescope by Riaz and collaborators, we infer a binary
fraction of 3.7±2.6% (with a 1σ confidence limit),
significantly lower than the fraction of resolved binary M dwarfs (~20%)
over the same mass and separation ranges. This result suggests a sharp
cut-off in the multiplicity fraction from G to M subdwarfs, indicating
that the metallicity plays a role at lower masses and/or an
environmental effect governing the formation of metal-poor M dwarfs
compared to their metallicity counterparts.
Based on observations collected at the
Centro Astronómico Hispano Alemán (CAHA) at Calar Alto,
operated jointly by the
Max-Planck Institut für Astronomie and the Instituto de
Astrofísica de Andalucía (CSIC).