论文标题
从SB9-Catalogue确定的NASA TESS和NASA开普勒的二进制系统中的99个振荡红色巨星
99 oscillating red-giant stars in binary systems with NASA TESS and NASA Kepler identified from the SB9-Catalogue
论文作者
论文摘要
二元系统中的振荡红色巨星是研究恒星在进化的晚期阶段中的结构和演变的理想测试床。在二进制系统中有83个已知的红色巨人,其中只有〜40个已经确定了全局地震参数和轨道参数,与众多已知的振荡恒星相比,样品很小。红色巨型二进制系统的检测通常是从空间光度法中出色的二进制标志中获得的。此类数据的时间群偏向于尺寸不足的系统和轨道的检测,以使红色巨人在进化为红色巨型分支时完全延伸。因此,样品显示出过量的H壳燃烧巨头,同时在He-Core燃烧阶段包含很少的恒星。从光谱二进制轨道(SB9)的第九目录中,我们确定了托管红色巨型主要成分的候选系统。从NASA任务Kepler,K2和Tess(过境系外行星调查卫星)以及Brite(Brite Target Explorer)星座任务中搜索空间光度法,我们发现了99个系统,这些系统以前是托管振荡巨型组件的尚不清楚的。修订后的搜索策略使我们能够将托管振荡巨头的系统的轨道周期范围延长至26000天。如此宽阔的轨道允许大量的He-Core燃烧初选,这是从二元研究中完全看出恒星进化所必需的。在二元系统中,已知振荡红色巨星样品的大小三倍,是迈向地震学和潮汐研究的合奏方法的重要一步。尽管对于非分配二进制文件,倾斜度尚不清楚,但这种地震良好的样品将是与Gaia Astrestrestrotric轨道结合使用的二进制系统的宝库。
Oscillating red-giant stars in binary systems are an ideal testbed for investigating the structure and evolution of stars in the advanced phases of evolution. With 83 known red giants in binary systems, of which only ~40 have determined global seismic parameters and orbital parameters, the sample is small compared to the numerous known oscillating stars. The detection of red-giant binary systems is typically obtained from the signature of stellar binarity in space photometry. The time base of such data biases the detection towards systems with shorter periods and orbits of insufficient size to allow a red giant to fully extend as it evolves up the red-giant branch. Consequently, the sample shows an excess of H-shell burning giants while containing very few stars in the He-core burning phase. From the ninth catalogue of spectroscopic binary orbits (SB9), we identified candidate systems hosting a red-giant primary component. Searching space photometry from the NASA missions Kepler, K2, and TESS (Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite) as well as the BRITE (BRIght Target Explorer) constellation mission, we find 99 systems, which were previously unknown to host an oscillating giant component. The revised search strategy allowed us to extend the range of orbital periods of systems hosting oscillating giants up to 26000days. Such wide orbits allow a rich population of He-core burning primaries, which are required for a complete view of stellar evolution from binary studies. Tripling the size of the sample of known oscillating red-giant stars in binary systems is an important step towards an ensemble approach for seismology and tidal studies. While for non-eclipsing binaries the inclination is unknown, such a seismically well-characterized sample will be a treasure trove in combination with Gaia astrometric orbits for binary~systems.