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Description
This thesis presents the results of a brown dwarf companion direct imaging survey. Over a total of 4 nights, 200 B and A stars were imaged using the Keck telescope and the Near Infrared Camera 2 (NIRC2). Presented here are preliminary results from the nights of 04 June 2014 and

This thesis presents the results of a brown dwarf companion direct imaging survey. Over a total of 4 nights, 200 B and A stars were imaged using the Keck telescope and the Near Infrared Camera 2 (NIRC2). Presented here are preliminary results from the nights of 04 June 2014 and 17 December 2013. Brown dwarfs are partially degenerate objects that have masses between approximately 13 MJup and 75 MJup. Currently, the number of brown dwarf companions found around high mass stars is small. Finding brown dwarfs as companions to B and A stars will allow astronomers to study these objects when they are young and bright, giving key insights into their formation and evolution. \par A pipeline was written specifically for these data sets that includes dark subtraction, flat field correction, bad pixel correction, distortion correction, centering, filtering, and point spread function (PSF) subtraction. This subtraction was accomplished using the Karhunen-Loeve Image Processing (KLIP) algorithm which employs principal component analysis and Karhunen-Loeve (KL) transforms to subtract out starlight and artifacts from the images and allow for easier detection of a candidate companion. \par Only candidate companions from the night of 04 June 2014 were analyzed, with 95 candidate companions found around 22 stars. Due to a lack of some necessary images, 91 companions around 20 stars were analyzed and their masses were found to be approximately 6 MJup to 150 MJup with projected separations from the host star of approximately 100AU to 900AU. An upper limit of 6.6% was placed on stellar companion frequency and an upper limit of 93% was placed on brown dwarf companion frequency. This survey achieved a median sensitivity of ΔK of 12.6 at 1" and a ΔK of 15.1 at 3.6". Further observations will be required to determine whether the candidates found are true co-moving companions or background stars not bound to the host star.
ContributorsGarani, Jasmine (Author) / Patience, Jennifer (Thesis advisor) / Simon, Molly (Committee member) / Line, Michael (Committee member) / Nielsen, Eric (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022