We present a radial-velocity study of the triple-lined system Gliese 644 and
derive spectroscopic elements for the inner and outer orbits with periods of
2.9655 and 627 days. We also utilize old visual data, as well as modern speckle
and adaptive optics observations, to derive a new astrometric solution for the
outer orbit. These two orbits together allow us to derive masses for each of
the three components in the system: M_A = 0.410 +/- 0.028 (6.9%), M_Ba = 0.336
+/- 0.016 (4.7%), and $M_Bb = 0.304 +/- 0.014 (4.7%) M_solar. We suggest that
the relative inclination of the two orbits is very small. Our individual masses
and spectroscopic light ratios for the three M stars in the Gliese 644 system
provide three points for the mass-luminosity relation near the bottom of the
Main Sequence, where the relation is poorly determined. These three points
agree well with theoretical models for solar metallicity and an age of 5 Gyr.
Our radial velocities for Gliese 643 and vB 8, two common-proper-motion
companions of Gliese 644, support the interpretation that all five M stars are
moving together in a physically bound group. We discuss possible scenarios for
the formation and evolution of this configuration, such as the formation of all
five stars in a sequence of fragmentation events leading directly to the
hierarchical configuration now observed, versus formation in a small N cluster
with subsequent dynamical evolution into the present hierarchical
configuration.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figures, Accepted for publication in MNRA