All transiting planets are at risk of contamination by blends with nearby,
unresolved stars. Blends dilute the transit signal, causing the planet to
appear smaller than it really is, or produce a false positive detection when
the target star is blended with eclipsing binary stars. This paper reports on
high spatial-resolution adaptive optics images of 90 Kepler planetary
candidates. Companion stars are detected as close as 0.1 arcsec from the target
star. Images were taken in the near-infrared (J and Ks bands) with ARIES on the
MMT and PHARO on the Palomar Hale 200-inch. Most objects (60%) have at least
one star within 6 arcsec separation and a magnitude difference of 9. Eighteen
objects (20%) have at least one companion within 2 arcsec of the target star; 6
companions (7%) are closer than 0.5 arcsec. Most of these companions were
previously unknown, and the associated planetary candidates should receive
additional scrutiny. Limits are placed on the presence of additional companions
for every system observed, which can be used to validate planets statistically
using the BLENDER method. Validation is particularly critical for low-mass,
potentially Earth-like worlds, which are not detectable with current-generation
radial velocity techniques. High-resolution images are thus a crucial component
of any transit follow-up program.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, accepted to A