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Published July 10, 2010 | Published
Journal Article Open

Modeling Multi-wavelength Stellar Astrometry. I. SIM Lite Observations of Interacting Binaries

Abstract

Interacting binaries (IBs) consist of a secondary star that fills or is very close to filling its Roche lobe, resulting in accretion onto the primary star, which is often, but not always, a compact object. In many cases, the primary star, secondary star, and the accretion disk can all be significant sources of luminosity. SIM Lite will only measure the photocenter of an astrometric target, and thus determining the true astrometric orbits of such systems will be difficult. We have modified the Eclipsing Light Curve code to allow us to model the flux-weighted reflex motions of IBs, in a code we call REFLUX. This code gives us sufficient flexibility to investigate nearly every configuration of IB. We find that SIM Lite will be able to determine astrometric orbits for all sufficiently bright IBs where the primary or secondary star dominates the luminosity. For systems where there are multiple components that comprise the spectrum in the optical bandpass accessible to SIM Lite, we find it is possible to obtain absolute masses for both components, although multi-wavelength photometry will be required to disentangle the multiple components. In all cases, SIM Lite will at least yield accurate inclinations and provide valuable information that will allow us to begin to understand the complex evolution of mass-transferring binaries. It is critical that SIM Lite maintains a multi-wavelength capability to allow for the proper deconvolution of the astrometric orbits in multi-component systems.

Additional Information

© 2010 The American Astronomical Society. Received 2010 February 18; accepted 2010 May 17; published 2010 June 17. This work was sponsored in part by an SIM Science Study (PI: D. Gelino) from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration through a contract with the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology. J.L.C. acknowledges additional support from a New Mexico Space Grant Consortium Fellowship. The authors thank the referee for comments which helped to improve the manuscript.

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August 22, 2023
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