2 research outputs found
Observations of Binary Stars with the Differential Speckle Survey Instrument. VII. Measures from 2010 September to 2012 February at the WIYN Telescope
We report on speckle observations of binary stars carried out at the WIYN
Telescope over the period from September 2010 through February 2012, providing
relative astrometry for 2521 observations of 883 objects, 856 of which are
double stars and 27 of which are triples. The separations measured span a range
of 0.01 to 1.75 arc seconds. Wavelengths of 562 nm, 692 nm, and 880 nm were
used, and differential photometry at one or more of these wavelengths is
presented in most cases. Sixty-six components were resolved for the first time.
We also estimate detection limits at 0.2 and 1.0 arc seconds for high-quality
observations in cases where no companion was seen, a total of 176 additional
objects. Detection limits vary based on observing conditions and
signal-to-noise ratio, but are approximately 4 magnitudes at 0.2 arc seconds
and 6 magnitudes at 1.0 arc seconds on average. Analyzing the measurement
precision of the data set, we find that the individual separations obtained
have linear measurement uncertainties of approximately 2 mas, and photometry is
uncertain to approximately 0.1 magnitudes in general. This work provides
fundamental, well-calibrated data for future orbit and mass determinations, and
we present three first orbits and total mass estimates of nearby K-dwarf
systems as examples of this potential