We present initial results measuring the companion fraction of metal-poor
stars ([Fe/H]<−2.0). We are employing the Lick Observatory planet-finding
system to make high-precision Doppler observations of these objects. The binary
fraction of metal-poor stars provides important constraints on star formation
in the early Galaxy (Carney et al. 2003). Although it has been shown that a
majority of solar metallicity stars are in binaries, it is not clear if this is
the case for metal-poor stars. Is there a metallicity floor below which binary
systems do not form or become rare? To test this we are determining binary
fractions at metallicities below [Fe/H]=−2.0. Our measurments are not as
precise as the planet finders', but we are still finding errors of only 50 to
300 m/s, depending on the signal-to-noise of a spectrum and stellar atmosphere
of the star. At this precision we can be much more complete than previous
studies in our search for stellar companions.Comment: To appear in conference proceedings,"First Stars III", eds. B.
O'Shea, A. Heger & T. Abel. 3 pages, 5 figure