A lack of close binaries among hot horizontal branch stars in globular clusters. II. NGC\,2808
C. Moni Bidin, S. Villanova, G. Piotto, Y. Momany

TL;DR
This study investigates the binary star fraction among hot horizontal branch stars in NGC 2808, revealing a higher binary incidence in hotter stars and suggesting a possible age-related trend, challenging existing models.
Contribution
It provides the first measurement of intermediate-period binaries among cluster HB stars and explores the binary fraction variation with temperature and cluster age.
Findings
No binaries detected among cooler stars below 17000 K.
Approximately 20-30% binary fraction among hotter stars, with large confidence intervals.
Intermediate-period binaries may constitute over 15-20% of the hottest stars.
Abstract
Models based on their binary origin have been very successful in reproducing the properties of field subdwarf-B stars, but the observations of their analogues in globular clusters has posed new problems, while the discovery of multiple populations offered an appealing alternative scenario for the formation of these stars. We search for binaries of period P<200 days among a sample of blue horizontal branch stars (Teff=12000-22000 K) in NGC2808, a cluster known to host three distinct stellar populations and a multimodal horizontal branch. The final sample consists of 64 targets. The radial velocity of the targets was measured in fourteen epochs, spanning a temporal interval of about 75 days. We detect no RV variable object among stars cooler than the photometric G1 gap at 17000 K, while two close (P<10 days) and two intermediate-period (P=10-50 days) systems are found among hotter…
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