Establishing Alpha Oph as a Prototype Rotator: Improved Astrometric Orbit
Sasha Hinkley (1,17), John D. Monnier (2), Ben R. Oppenheimer (3),, Lewis C Roberts Jr.(4), Michael Ireland (7), Neil Zimmerman (5,3), Douglas, Brenner (3), Ian R. Parry (6), Frantz Martinache (8), Olivier Lai (9), Remi, Soummer (10), Anand Sivaramakrishnan (3,11,12)

TL;DR
This study refines the astrometric orbit and mass estimates of the Alpha Oph system using eight years of adaptive optics imaging, improving understanding of the star's properties and its companion.
Contribution
It provides an improved, dynamically-based orbit and mass estimates for Alpha Oph and its companion, reconciling previous discrepancies with stellar evolutionary models.
Findings
Mass of Alpha Oph A: 2.40 solar masses
Mass of Alpha Oph B: 0.85 solar masses (dynamical)
Predicted periastron passage in 2012 with 50 mas separation
Abstract
The nearby star Alpha Oph (Ras Alhague) is a rapidly rotating A5IV star spinning at ~89% of its breakup velocity. This system has been imaged extensively by interferometric techniques, giving a precise geometric model of the star's oblateness and the resulting temperature variation on the stellar surface. Fortuitously, Alpha Oph has a previously known stellar companion, and characterization of the orbit provides an independent, dynamically-based check of both the host star and the companion mass. Such measurements are crucial to constrain models of such rapidly rotating stars. In this study, we combine eight years of Adaptive Optics imaging data from the Palomar, AEOS, and CFHT telescopes to derive an improved, astrometric characterization of the companion orbit. We also use photometry from these observations to derive a model-based estimate of the companion mass. A fit was performed on…
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