Verification of Gaia Data Release 3 Single-lined Spectroscopic Binary Solutions With Three Transiting Low-mass Secondaries
Article
Article Title | Verification of Gaia Data Release 3 Single-lined Spectroscopic Binary Solutions With Three Transiting Low-mass Secondaries |
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ERA Journal ID | 1048 |
Article Category | Article |
Authors | Zhou, George, Schmidt, Stephen P., Schlaufman, Kevin C., Ding, Keyi, Grunblatt, Samuel K., Carmichael, Theron, Bieryla, Allyson, Rodriguez, Joseph E, Schulte, Jack, Vowell, Noah, Quinn, Samuel N. Q, Yee, Samuel W., Winn, Joshua N., Hartman, Joel D., Latham, David W., Caldwell, Douglas A., Fausnaugh, M. M., Hedges, Christina, Jenkins, Jon M., Osborn, Hugh P. and Seager, Sara |
Journal Title | The Astronomical Journal |
Journal Citation | 166 (6) |
Article Number | 225 |
Number of Pages | 18 |
Year | 2023 |
Publisher | IOP Publishing |
Place of Publication | United States |
ISSN | 0004-6256 |
1538-3881 | |
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) | https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ad0135 |
Web Address (URL) | https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.3847/1538-3881/ad0135 |
Abstract | While secondary mass inferences based on single-lined spectroscopic binary (SB1) solutions are subject to sin i degeneracies, this degeneracy can be lifted through the observations of eclipses. We combine the subset of Gaia Data Release 3 SB1 solutions consistent with brown dwarf-mass secondaries with the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) Object of Interest (TOI) list to identify three candidate transiting brown dwarf systems. Groundbased precision radial velocity follow-up observations confirm that TOI-2533.01 is a transiting brown dwarf with MM M 72 0.069 3 3 Jup 0.003 0.003 = = - + - + orbiting TYC 2010-124-1 and that TOI-5427.01 is a transiting very low-mass star with MM M 93 0.088 2 2 Jup 0.002 0.002 = = - + - + orbiting UCAC4 515-012898. We validate TOI-1712.01 as a very lowmass star with MM M 82 0.079 7 7 Jup 0.007 0.007 = = - + - + transiting the primary in the hierarchical triple system BD+45 1593. Even after accounting for third light, TOI-1712.01 has a radius nearly a factor of 2 larger than predicted for isolated stars with similar properties. We propose that the intense instellation experienced by TOI-1712.01 diminishes the temperature gradient near its surface, suppresses convection, and leads to its inflated radius. Our analyses verify Gaia DR3 SB1 solutions in the low Doppler semiamplitude limit, thereby providing the foundation for future joint analyses of Gaia radial velocities and Kepler, K2, TESS, and PLAnetary Transits and Oscillations light curves for the characterization of transiting massive brown dwarfs and very low-mass stars. |
Keywords | Brown dwarfs; Eclipsing binary stars ; Substellar companion stars; Spectroscopic binary stars ; Stellar radii ; Low mass stars; Trinary stars |
Contains Sensitive Content | Does not contain sensitive content |
ANZSRC Field of Research 2020 | 5101. Astronomical sciences |
Byline Affiliations | Johns Hopkins University, United States |
Carnegie Institution for Science, United States | |
University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom | |
Center for Astrophysics Harvard and Smithsonian, United States | |
Michigan State University, United States | |
Centre for Astrophysics | |
Princeton University, United States | |
SETI Institute, United States | |
NASA Ames Research Center, United States | |
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, United States | |
Texas Tech University, United States | |
University of Maryland, United States | |
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, United States | |
University of Bern, Switzerland |
https://research.usq.edu.au/item/zq351/verification-of-gaia-data-release-3-single-lined-spectroscopic-binary-solutions-with-three-transiting-low-mass-secondaries
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