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arxiv: 2605.23018 · v1 · pith:E245O3PRnew · submitted 2026-05-21 · 🌌 astro-ph.EP · astro-ph.SR

Gaia Exoplanet Orbits, Demographics, and Evolution Survey (GEODES): Characteristics of Three Long-Period Companions Accelerating their Host Stars

Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 05:09 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🌌 astro-ph.EP astro-ph.SR
keywords exoplanetsGaia astrometryradial velocitybrown dwarfslong-period companionsHIP starsadaptive optics
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The pith

Gaia astrometry combined with radial velocities constrains masses and orbits for three long-period companions.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The GEODES survey uses upcoming Gaia data releases to identify and vet giant planet candidates around stars of varying types. This paper presents the first three systems where both tangential acceleration from astrometry and radial acceleration from spectroscopy are detected. For HIP 18512 the companion is a low-mass star at 166 AU. For HIP 45839 the companion mass and separation are consistent with a brown dwarf at roughly 18 AU. For HIP 81991 the data favor a 9.5 Jupiter-mass object at 6.4 AU that is more likely planetary than substellar. These cases illustrate how pre-DR4 multi-epoch data can already deliver precise companion parameters.

Core claim

Joint modeling of Hipparcos, Hipparcos-Gaia, Gaia DR2 and DR3 absolute astrometry together with adaptive-optics imaging and precision radial velocities yields orbital separations and masses for the companions: 166 AU and stellar mass for HIP 18512; 17.9 AU and 45 Jupiter masses for HIP 45839; and 6.4 AU and 9.5 Jupiter masses for HIP 81991.

What carries the argument

Simultaneous Keplerian orbit fit to multi-epoch absolute astrometry, radial-velocity trends, and adaptive-optics non-detections that converts observed accelerations into companion mass and semi-major axis.

If this is right

  • The same data combination can be applied to the thousands of Gaia DR4 giant-planet candidates once released.
  • HIP 81991 supplies an early example of a wide-orbit object whose mass lies in the planet-brown-dwarf transition region.
  • Occurrence-rate studies of giant planets and brown dwarfs can incorporate these systems as benchmarks for stars of known age and metallicity.
  • Non-detections in adaptive optics already place useful upper limits on companion mass even before full orbital coverage.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • If the single-companion assumption holds for a larger sample, the survey could tighten constraints on the occurrence of wide-orbit giant planets around K and G dwarfs.
  • Repeating the analysis after Gaia DR4 would test whether the current mass and period posteriors remain stable with improved astrometric precision.
  • These three systems offer concrete test cases for models that predict how giant-planet and brown-dwarf formation channels vary with separation.

Load-bearing premise

The measured accelerations are produced by exactly one bound companion on a single Keplerian orbit.

What would settle it

Future radial-velocity monitoring or direct imaging that yields a companion mass or period lying well outside the reported 1-sigma intervals would falsify the derived parameters.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2605.23018 by Andrew Howard, B.J. Fulton, Brendan Bowler, Dori Blakely, Erik Petigura, Howard Isaacson, Jerry Xuan, Jingwen Zhang, Judah Van Zandt, Justin Crepp, Kyle Franson, Lauren Biddle, Marvin Morgan, Rocio Kiman, William Thompson.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: ShaneAO/ShARCS high-resolution imaging of HIP 18512 (left), ShaneAO/ShARCS imaging of HIP 45839 (center), and Keck/NIRC2 high-contrast imaging of HIP 45839 (right). Each image is oriented such that north is up and and east is to the left. HIP 18512 shows a binary at a separation of 10. ′′9 and a position angle of 12.7 ◦ . The Keck/NIRC2 imaging of HIP 45839 shows a faint source at 5. ′′3 which is not consi… view at source ↗
Figure 2
Figure 2. Figure 2: Contrast curves for HIP 81991 (top) and HIP 45839 (bottom) showing 5σ sensitivity limits from ShaneAO (red) and archival Keck/NIRC2 (blue) imaging. At a given angular separation, a companion with lower contrast, i.e. smaller ∆Ks, than the value indicated by either curve would be detectable in the corresponding imaging data at > 5σ significance. Regions of partial field of view (FOV) coverage for the Keck/N… view at source ↗
Figure 3
Figure 3. Figure 3: Top: RV time series of HIP 18512. In Panel a), colored points and gray lines show the RV measurements and errors, respectively. The blue line shows the maximum likelihood model, with the RV residuals to this model plotted in Panel b). Bottom: Proper motion time-series from the joint astrometry+RV fit using octofitter. The colored curves are random posterior draws of the model. Black points show catalog mea… view at source ↗
Figure 4
Figure 4. Figure 4: Left: Our partial orbit fits to our RVs and absolute astrometry for HIP 18512. Red contours show constraints derived from ethraid, with the dark region covering 68% of the posterior mass, and the light region covering 95%. The gold star marks the mass and separation of the known M2.5 V stellar companion (V = 11.6) derived by An et al. (2025). We detected the companion in the AO images and find that its par… view at source ↗
Figure 5
Figure 5. Figure 5: Same as [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p012_5.png] view at source ↗
Figure 6
Figure 6. Figure 6: Same as [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p013_6.png] view at source ↗
Figure 7
Figure 7. Figure 7: Same as [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p014_7.png] view at source ↗
Figure 8
Figure 8. Figure 8: Same as [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p015_8.png] view at source ↗
read the original abstract

The upcoming release of $Gaia$ DR4 will yield thousands of giant planet candidates, eventually enabling studies of giant planet eccentricities, masses, and occurrence rates across a broad range of stellar host masses, metallicities, and ages. However, some of these planet candidates are expected to be false positives, and even genuine detections will require additional observations to precisely determine their orbits and masses. We present here the first results of the $Gaia$ Exoplanet Orbits, Demographics, and Evolution Survey (GEODES), an observational campaign to identify the most promising planet candidate hosts for pre-DR4 vetting and post-DR4 validation and characterization. In this paper we showcase three systems from our broader sample exhibiting both tangential and radial accelerations, each representing a distinct outcome of our survey strategy. We combine $Hipparcos$, $Hipparcos$-$Gaia$, $Gaia$ DR2, and $Gaia$ DR3 absolute astrometry with adaptive optics (AO) imaging and precision RVs to constrain companion masses and orbits. HIP 18512, a nearby (15.3 pc) K4V dwarf, hosts a low-mass stellar companion at 10.87" $\pm$ 0.07" (166 AU) which produces significant RV and astrometric accelerations on its host star. The RV trend and astrometric acceleration of the nearby (24.2 pc) K4V star HIP 45839, together with an AO imaging non-detection, constrain the companion to $a$ = 17.9^{+4.8}_{-2.7} AU ($P$ = 70--127 years) and $M$ = 45.2^{+10.5}_{-12.7} $M_{Jup}$. In the case of HIP 81991 (43.8 pc, G5V), the astrometric and RV data indicate that the companion has a separation of 6.4^{+0.6}_{-0.3} AU ($P$ = 14.4--17.7 years) and a mass of 9.5^{+5.4}_{-2.2} $M_{Jup}$, and is more likely a planet (65%) than a brown dwarf (35%).

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 1 minor

Summary. The manuscript reports initial results from the GEODES survey, using combined Hipparcos-Gaia absolute astrometry, RV trends, and AO imaging to constrain three long-period companions. HIP 18512 hosts a stellar companion at 166 AU; HIP 45839 has a companion at 17.9 AU with mass 45.2 M_Jup; HIP 81991 has a companion at 6.4 AU with mass 9.5 M_Jup and 65% probability of being planetary rather than a brown dwarf.

Significance. If the orbit models hold, the work supplies concrete mass and period constraints on individual systems that can serve as benchmarks for giant-planet and brown-dwarf demographics ahead of Gaia DR4. The multi-technique vetting strategy illustrated here is directly relevant to the larger candidate sample expected from future Gaia releases.

major comments (2)
  1. [HIP 81991 orbit-fitting section] HIP 81991 orbit-fitting section: the reported 65 % planet / 35 % brown-dwarf probability is obtained by integrating the joint posterior above and below the 13 M_Jup boundary. This posterior is conditioned on the explicit assumptions that (i) a single bound Keplerian companion accounts for the entire observed acceleration vector and (ii) the AO contrast curve supplies a hard upper mass limit at the fitted separation without marginalization over inclination or unresolved multiplicity. Both assumptions are load-bearing for the quoted probability; relaxing either would shift or broaden the mass posterior and could move the integrated probability across 50 %.
  2. [HIP 45839 and HIP 81991 orbit-fitting sections] HIP 45839 and HIP 81991 orbit-fitting sections: the manuscript states that the combined datasets constrain the quoted masses and periods, yet neither the fitting code, full covariance matrices, nor explicit treatment of possible additional companions is provided. These omissions prevent independent verification of the central quantitative claims.
minor comments (1)
  1. [Abstract and §3] Abstract and §3: the period range for HIP 81991 is given as 14.4--17.7 years while the semi-major axis is quoted to one decimal place; consistency between these derived quantities and the quoted uncertainties should be checked.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their constructive and detailed comments, which have helped us identify areas for improvement in transparency and reproducibility. We address each major comment below and will incorporate revisions to clarify assumptions, provide additional materials, and strengthen the discussion of model limitations.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: HIP 81991 orbit-fitting section: the reported 65 % planet / 35 % brown-dwarf probability is obtained by integrating the joint posterior above and below the 13 M_Jup boundary. This posterior is conditioned on the explicit assumptions that (i) a single bound Keplerian companion accounts for the entire observed acceleration vector and (ii) the AO contrast curve supplies a hard upper mass limit at the fitted separation without marginalization over inclination or unresolved multiplicity. Both assumptions are load-bearing for the quoted probability; relaxing either would shift or broaden the mass posterior and could move the integrated probability across 50 %.

    Authors: We agree that the 65% probability is conditional on the stated assumptions of a single Keplerian companion and a hard upper mass limit from the AO contrast curve. In the revised manuscript we will explicitly state these assumptions in the HIP 81991 orbit-fitting section, discuss their impact on the planet/brown-dwarf classification, and add a qualitative assessment of how marginalizing over inclination or allowing for unresolved multiplicity could affect the mass posterior. revision: yes

  2. Referee: HIP 45839 and HIP 81991 orbit-fitting sections: the manuscript states that the combined datasets constrain the quoted masses and periods, yet neither the fitting code, full covariance matrices, nor explicit treatment of possible additional companions is provided. These omissions prevent independent verification of the central quantitative claims.

    Authors: We acknowledge that the current manuscript does not include the fitting code, full covariance matrices, or explicit discussion of possible additional companions. In the revised version we will make the orbit-fitting code publicly available (via a repository link in the paper), include the covariance matrices in an appendix or data table, and add a paragraph justifying the single-companion assumption with checks for additional signals in the astrometric and RV data. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity detected

full rationale

The paper derives companion masses, separations, periods, and planet/brown-dwarf probabilities by fitting standard single-Keplerian orbit models to independent external datasets (Hipparcos, Gaia DR2/DR3 absolute astrometry, new RV trends, and AO imaging non-detections). No equation or result is defined in terms of itself, no fitted parameter is relabeled as a prediction, and no load-bearing premise reduces to a self-citation chain. The 65 % planet probability for HIP 81991 is obtained by integrating the posterior mass distribution above/below 13 M_Jup after the fit; this is a direct statistical summary of the data-constrained posterior rather than a tautology. The modeling assumptions are stated explicitly but remain falsifiable against the observations and do not create a self-referential loop.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

2 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

The central claims rest on standard two-body orbital mechanics and the assumption that the measured accelerations are produced by the reported companions; no new physical entities are introduced.

free parameters (2)
  • companion mass for HIP 45839
    Posterior median 45.2 M_Jup obtained by fitting combined astrometric and RV data.
  • companion mass for HIP 81991
    Posterior median 9.5 M_Jup obtained by fitting combined astrometric and RV data.
axioms (2)
  • standard math Keplerian two-body motion governs the observed accelerations
    Invoked when converting accelerations into orbital elements for all three systems.
  • domain assumption AO non-detection sets a hard upper limit on companion brightness and therefore mass at the imaged separation
    Used to rule out stellar companions for HIP 45839 and HIP 81991.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 6026 in / 1510 out tokens · 37700 ms · 2026-05-25T05:09:12.493953+00:00 · methodology

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