158 research outputs found
Analysis of The Hipparcos Measurements of HD10697 - A Mass Determination of a Brown-Dwarf Secondary
HD10697 is a nearby main-sequence star around which a planet candidate has
recently been discovered by means of radial-velocity measurements (Vogt et al.
1999, submitted to ApJ). The stellar orbit has a period of about three years,
the secondary minimum mass is 6.35 Jupiter masses and the minimum semi-major
axis is 0.36 milli-arc-sec (mas). Using the Hipparcos data of HD10697 together
with the spectroscopic elements of Vogt et al. (1999) we found a semi-major
axis of 2.1 +/- 0.7 mas, implying a mass of 38 +/- 13 Jupiter masses for the
unseen companion. We therefore suggest that the secondary of HD10697 is
probably a brown dwarf, orbiting around its parent star at a distance of 2 AU.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, LaTex, aastex, accepted for publication by ApJ
Letter
The High Eccentricity of the Planet Around 16 Cyg B
We consider the high eccentricity, 0.66, of the newly discovered planet
around 16 Cyg B, using the fact that the parent star is part of a wide binary.
We show that the high eccentricity of the planet could be the result of tidal
forces exerted on 16 Cyg B and its planet by 16 Cyg A, the distant companion in
the system. By following stellar triple systems with parameters similar to
those of 16 Cyg, we have established that the orbital eccentricity of the
planet could have gone through strong modulation, with an amplitude of 0.8 or
even larger, with typical timescale of tens of millions years. The amplitude of
the planet eccentricity strongly depends on the relative inclination between
the plane of motion of the planet and that of the wide binary 16 Cyg AB. To
account for the present eccentricity of the planet we have to assume that the
angle between the two planes of motion is large, at least 60 deg. We argue that
this assumption is reasonable for wide binaries like 16 Cyg AB.Comment: 2 Figures, Latex, submitted for publication to ApJ
Formation of terrestrial planets in close binary systems: the case of Alpha Centauri A
At present the possible existence of planets around the stars of a close
binary system is still matter of debate. Can planetary bodies form in spite of
the strong gravitational perturbations of the companion star? We study in this
paper via numerical simulation the last stage of planetary formation, from
embryos to terrestrial planets in the Alpha Cen system, the prototype of close
binary systems. We find that Earth class planets can grow around Alpha Cen A on
a time-scale of 50 Myr. In some of our numerical models the planets form
directly in the habitable zone of the star in low eccentric orbits. In one
simulation two of the final planets are in a 2:1 mean motion resonance that,
however, becomes unstable after 200 Myr. During the formation process some
planetary embryos fall into the stars possibly altering their metallicity.Comment: accepted for pubblication in A&A, 13 pages, 9 figure
The change in the inclination angle of the non-eclipsing binary SS Lacertae: future eclipses
Eclipses in the 14.4-day period double-lined binary SS Lac were observed
photographically and visually early in the 20th century, but stopped some 50 or
60 years ago. This has been explained by the presence of a distant third star
in the system, which has now been detected spectroscopically with a period of
679 days. The plane of the orbit of the binary is changing relative to the line
of sight in response to perturbations from this third object. A recent analysis
by Milone et al. (M00) of all photometric material available for the system,
including a re-measurement of original Harvard plates, has confirmed earlier
reports of changes in the depth of the eclipses as a function of time, which
are due to the third star. In this paper we discuss our detailed analysis of
the eclipse amplitude measurements, and extract from them information on the
change in the inclination angle of the binary over the last century. Our use of
a much improved ephemeris for the system by Torres & Stefanik was found to be
crucial, and prompted us to re-determine all the amplitudes from the historical
data at our disposal, including the Harvard material used by M00.
Systematically lower measurements on the branches of the minima were properly
accounted for, and we made use of both a linear approximation to the time
variation of the inclination angle and a more realistic model based on the
theory of three-body interactions ("regression of the nodes" effect). The nodal
cycle is found to be about 600 yr, within which TWO eclipse "seasons" occur,
each lasting about 100 yr. The non-eclipsing status of the system is expected
to continue until the beginning of the 23rd century.Comment: 32 pages, including figures and tables. Accepted for The Astronomical
Journal, April 200
The Triple Pulsar System PSR B1620-26 in M4
The millisecond pulsar PSR B1620-26, in the globular cluster M4, has a white
dwarf companion in a half-year orbit. Anomalously large variations in the
pulsar's apparent spin-down rate have suggested the presence of a second
companion in a much wider orbit. Using timing observations made on more than
seven hundred days spanning eleven years, we confirm this anomalous timing
behavior. We explicitly demonstrate, for the first time, that a timing model
consisting of the sum of two non-interacting Keplerian orbits can account for
the observed signal. Both circular and elliptical orbits are allowed, although
highly eccentric orbits require improbable orbital geometries.
The motion of the pulsar in the inner orbit is very nearly a Keplerian
ellipse, but the tidal effects of the outer companion cause variations in the
orbital elements. We have measured the change in the projected semi-major axis
of the orbit, which is dominated by precession-driven changes in the orbital
inclination. This measurement, along with limits on the rate of change of other
orbital elements, can be used to significantly restrict the properties of the
outer orbit. We find that the second companion most likely has a mass m~0.01
Msun --- it is almost certainly below the hydrogen burning limit (m<0.036 Msun,
95% confidence) --- and has a current distance from the binary of ~35 AU and
orbital period of order one hundred years. Circular (and near-circular) orbits
are allowed only if the pulsar magnetic field is ~3x10^9 G, an order of
magnitude higher than a typical millisecond pulsar field strength. In this
case, the companion has mass m~1.2x10^-3 Msun and orbital period ~62 years.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, 3 tables. Very minor clarifications and
rewording. Accepted for publication in the Astrophys.
Did the ancient egyptians record the period of the eclipsing binary Algol - the Raging one?
The eclipses in binary stars give precise information of orbital period
changes. Goodricke discovered the 2.867 days period in the eclipses of Algol in
the year 1783. The irregular orbital period changes of this longest known
eclipsing binary continue to puzzle astronomers. The mass transfer between the
two members of this binary should cause a long-term increase of the orbital
period, but observations over two centuries have not confirmed this effect.
Here, we present evidence indicating that the period of Algol was 2.850 days
three millenia ago. For religious reasons, the ancient Egyptians have recorded
this period into the Cairo Calendar, which describes the repetitive changes of
the Raging one. Cairo Calendar may be the oldest preserved historical document
of the discovery of a variable star.Comment: 26 pages, 5 figures, 11 table
Eclipse Timings of the Transient Low Mass X-ray Binary EXO0748-676. IV. The Rossi X-Ray Timing Explorer Eclipses
We report our complete database of X-ray eclipse timings of the low mass
X-ray binary EXO0748-676 observed by the Rossi X-Ray Timing Explorer (RXTE)
satellite. As of this writing we have accumulated 443 full X-ray eclipses, 392
of which have been observed with the Proportional Counter Array on RXTE. These
include both observations where an eclipse was specifically targeted and those
eclipses found in the RXTE data archive. Eclipse cycle count has been
maintained since the discovery of the EXO0748-676 system in February 1985. We
describe our observing and analysis techniques for each eclipse and describe
improvements we have made since the last compilation by Wolff et al. (2002).
The principal result of this paper is the database containing the timing
results from a seven-parameter fit to the X-ray light curve for each observed
eclipse along with the associated errors in the fitted parameters. Based on the
standard O-C analysis, EXO0748-676 has undergone four distinct orbital period
epochs since its discovery. In addition, EXO0748-676 shows small-scale events
in the O-C curve that are likely due to short-lived changes in the secondary
star.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal Supplement
Series, 5 figures. Analysis revised. Tables 1 & 3 update
Speckle interferometry and orbits of "fast" visual binaries
Results of speckle observations at the 4.1-m SOAR telescope in 2012 (158
measures of 121 systems, 27 non-resolutions) are reported. The aim is to follow
fast orbital motion of recently discovered or neglected close binaries and
sub-systems. Here 8 previously known orbits are defined better, two more are
completely revised, and five orbits are computed for the first time. Using
differential photometry from Hipparcos or speckle and the standard relation
between mass and absolute magnitude, the component's masses and dynamical
parallaxes are estimated for all 15 systems with new or updated orbits. Two
astrometric binaries HIP 54214 and 56245 are resolved here for the first time,
another 8 are measured. We highlight several unresolved pairs that may actually
be single despite multiple historic measures, such as 104 Tau and f Pup AB.
Continued monitoring is needed to understand those enigmatic cases.Comment: 20 pages 6 figures 6 tables Accepted by the Astronomical Journa
Photometric Follow-up Observations of the Transiting Neptune-Mass Planet GJ 436b
This paper presents multi-band photometric follow-up observations of the
Neptune-mass transiting planet GJ 436b, consisting of 5 new ground-based
transit light curves obtained in May 2007. Together with one already published
light curve we have at hand a total of 6 light curves, spanning 29 days. The
analysis of the data yields an orbital period P = 2.64386+-0.00003 days,
mid-transit time T_c [HJD] =2454235.8355+-0.0001, planet mass M_p = 23.1+-0.9
M_{\earth} = 0.073+-0.003 M_{Jup}, planet radius R_p = 4.2+-0.2 R_{\earth} =
0.37+-0.01 R_{Jup} and stellar radius R_s = 0.45+-0.02 R_{\sun}. Our typical
precision for the mid transit timing for each transit is about 30 seconds. We
searched the data for a possible signature of a second planet in the system
through transit timing variations (TTV) and variation of the impact parameter.
The analysis could not rule out a small, of the order of a minute, TTV and a
long-term modulation of the impact parameter, of the order of +0.2 year^{-1}.Comment: V2: Replaced with accepted versio
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