A Quadruple Excess in Wide Binary Systems: Evidence for Correlated Binary Formation

Abstract

Understanding the multiplicity of stellar systems and the correlations between their hierarchical components provides crucial insights into star formation processes. If binary companions form independently in each component of a wide binary (WB), the fraction of quadruple systems, i.e., 2+2 configurations where both components are themselves close binaries (CBs), should equal the product of individual CB fractions. Using Gaia DR3 radial velocity spectroscopy (RVS) data for WB systems, we measure the CB fraction p and quadruple fraction P2+2, suggesting an enhancement factor = P2+2/p2 = 2.34-0.11+0.12, significantly exceeding unity expected under a statistical model of independence. We confirm the significance of this excess by performing two sets of tests: (1) shuffling WB pairings while preserving the overall G distribution shows no significant enhancement, ruling out selection effects; (2) simulations preserving the spectral type (temperature-dependent) CB fraction also yield the same null excess. When examined as a function of WB separation, the enhancement remains strong at separations ≤ 5\,000 AU, but shows a decline towards unity at the widest separations (≥ 10\,000 AU). An independent proper motion anomaly (PMa) consistency check confirms the enhancement, suggesting a similar value. We further find that the enhancement declines with increasing peculiar velocity, suggesting that dynamical processing in older or dynamically hotter populations may transform 2+2 quadruples into triples over time. Our results provide strong evidence for correlated binary formation processes operating in WB systems.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…