2006
DOI: 10.1086/504823
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Two Suns in The Sky: Stellar Multiplicity in Exoplanet Systems

Abstract: We present results of a reconnaissance for stellar companions to all 131 radial-velocity-detected candidate extrasolar planetary systems known as of July 1, 2005. CPM companions were investigated using the multi-epoch DSS images, and confirmed by matching the trigonometric parallax distances of the primaries to companion distances estimated photometrically. We also attempt to confirm or refute companions listed in the Washington Double Star Catalog, the Catalogs of Nearby Stars, in Hipparcos results, and in Du… Show more

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Cited by 197 publications
(192 citation statements)
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References 88 publications
(155 reference statements)
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“…Varied efforts to discover unknown stellar companions have routinely identified new components (early examples being Patience et al 2002, Mugrauer et al 2004, and Raghavan et al 2006, so this fraction cannot be considered likely to be definitive. The majority of planets found in binary systems are circumstellar but a few have been identified in circumbinary (P-type) geometries e.g.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Varied efforts to discover unknown stellar companions have routinely identified new components (early examples being Patience et al 2002, Mugrauer et al 2004, and Raghavan et al 2006, so this fraction cannot be considered likely to be definitive. The majority of planets found in binary systems are circumstellar but a few have been identified in circumbinary (P-type) geometries e.g.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Virtually all previous models of planet formation, however, have assumed an isolated single star. Of the first 131 extrasolar planet systems that have been confirmed, at least 30 are on so-called S-type orbits that encircle one component of a binary star system, including at least 3 that orbit one member of a triple-star system (Raghavan et al 2006). …”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The discovery of planets in such systems convinced many research groups to examine the planetary formation and evolution in binary star systems, either in general or for selected ones (see e.g. Holman et al 1997;Holman & Wiegert 1999;Ford et al 2000;Pilat-Lohinger & Dvorak 2002;Pilat-Lohinger et al 2003;Dvorak et al 2003a,b;Thébault et al 2010;Musielak et al 2005;Haghighipour 2006;Raghavan et al 2006;Cuntz et al 2007;Kley & Nelson 2008;Paardekooper et al 2008;Takeda et al 2008;Saleh & Rasio 2009;Marzari et al 2010;Haghighipour et al 2010;and many others).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%