A ground-based measurement of the relativistic beaming effect in a detached double WD binary
Avi Shporer, David L. Kaplan, Justin D. R. Steinfadt, Lars Bildsten,, Steve B. Howell, Tsevi Mazeh

TL;DR
This paper reports the first ground-based measurement of the relativistic beaming effect in a detached double white dwarf binary, confirming theoretical predictions and demonstrating the potential of photometric beaming to detect faint companions.
Contribution
It provides the first observational measurement of relativistic beaming in a double white dwarf system from ground-based data, validating theoretical models.
Findings
Measured beaming amplitude consistent with predictions
No detectable ellipsoidal or reflection effects
Demonstrated beaming as a tool to find faint companions
Abstract
We report on the first ground-based measurement of the relativistic beaming effect (aka Doppler boosting). We observed the beaming effect in the detached, non-interacting eclipsing double white dwarf (WD) binary NLTT 11748. Our observations were motivated by the system's high mass ratio and low luminosity ratio, leading to a large beaming-induced variability amplitude at the orbital period of 5.6 hr. We observed the system during 3 nights at the 2.0m Faulkes Telescope North with the SDSS-g' filter, and fitted the data simultaneously for the beaming, ellipsoidal and reflection effects. Our fitted relative beaming amplitude is (3.0 +/- 0.4) x 10^(-3), consistent with the expected amplitude from a blackbody spectrum given the photometric primary radial velocity amplitude and effective temperature. This result is a first step in testing the relation between the photometric beaming amplitude…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle Accelerators and Free-Electron Lasers
