Kepler observations of the beaming binary KPD 1946+4340
S. Bloemen, T. R. Marsh, R. H. {\O}stensen, S. Charpinet, G. Fontaine,, P. Degroote, U. Heber, S. D. Kawaler, C. Aerts, E. M. Green, J. Telting, P., Brassard, B. T. G\"ansicke, G. Handler, D. W. Kurtz, R. Silvotti, V. Van, Grootel, J. E. Lindberg, T. Pursimo, P. A. Wilson

TL;DR
This paper analyzes Kepler data of the binary system KPD 1946+4340, revealing detailed system parameters, Doppler beaming effects, and stellar characteristics through light curve modeling and spectroscopy.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed modeling of a binary system including Doppler beaming in Kepler data, deriving system parameters without relying solely on spectroscopy.
Findings
Doppler beaming amplitude matches spectroscopic radial velocity.
System parameters derived with high precision.
No significant stellar pulsations detected.
Abstract
The Kepler Mission has acquired 33.5d of continuous one-minute photometry of KPD 1946+4340, a short-period binary system that consists of an sdB and a white dwarf. In the light curve, eclipses are clearly seen, with the deepest occurring when the compact white dwarf crosses the disc of the sdB (0.4%) and the more shallow ones (0.1%) when the sdB eclipses the white dwarf. As expected, the sdB is deformed by the gravitational field of the white dwarf, which produces an ellipsoidal modulation of the light curve. Spectacularly, a very strong Doppler beaming (aka Doppler boosting) effect is also clearly evident at the 0.1% level. This originates from the sdB's orbital velocity, which we measure to be 164.0\pm1.9 km/s from supporting spectroscopy. We present light curve models that account for all these effects, as well as gravitational lensing. We derive system parameters and uncertainties…
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