Péridier Library Abstract Archive
Abstract No. UT 371
Title: The Discovery of a Planetary Companion to 16 Cygni B
Author(s): W. D. Cochran, A. P. Hatzes (University of Texas); R. P. Butler and G. W. Marcy (SFSU and U. C. Berkeley)
Keywords: Planetary systems -- stars: individual (HR 7504)
E-Mail: William D. Cochran (to request a full copy of this paper)
Preprint: Document source
or Postscript
Release date: 12/2/96 12:55:12
Publication status: submitted to Astrophysical Journal
Comments: 18 pages, 3 figures
High-precision radial velocity observations of the solar-type star
16 Cygni B (HR7504, HD186427), taken at McDonald Observatory and
at Lick Observatory, have each independently discovered periodic
radial-velocity variations indicating the presence of a Jovian-mass companion
to this star. The orbital fit to the combined McDonald and Lick data gives a
period of 800.8 days, a velocity amplitude (K) of 43.9 m/s, and an eccentricity
of 0.63. This is the largest eccentricity of any planetary system discovered
so far. Assuming that 16 Cygni B has a mass of 1.0 Msun, the mass function
then implies a mass for the companion of 1.5 sin i Jupiter masses. While the
mass of this object is well within the range expected for planets, the large
orbital eccentricity cannot be explained simply by the standard model of growth
of planets in a protostellar disk. It is possible that this object was formed
in the normal manner with a low eccentricity orbit, and has undergone
post-formational orbital evolution, either through the same process which
formed the 'massive eccentric' planets around 70 Virginis and HD114762, or by
gravitational interactions with the companion star 16 Cygni A. It is also
possible that the object is an extremely low mass brown dwarf, formed through
fragmentation of the collapsing protostar. We explore a possible connection
between stellar photospheric Li depletion, pre-main sequence stellar rotation,
the presence of a massive proto-planetary disk, and the formation of a
planetary companion.