Circumstellar Habitable Zones of Binary Star Systems in the Solar Neighborhood
Siegfried Eggl, Elke Pilat-Lohinger, Barbara Funk, Nikolaos, Georgakarakos, Nader Haghighipour

TL;DR
This paper identifies and characterizes habitable zones in 19 nearby binary star systems, considering dynamical and radiative effects, and highlights 17 systems with stable habitable regions suitable for observational searches.
Contribution
It provides detailed habitable zone estimates for 19 binary systems, accounting for combined stellar influences, and assesses their observational signatures for Earth-like planets.
Findings
17 systems have stable habitable zones around at least one star
Most habitable zones are around K and M class stars
Proximity makes these systems prime targets for planet detection
Abstract
Binary and multiple systems constitute more than half of the total stellar population in the Solar neighborhood (Kiseleva-Eggleton and Eggleton 2001). Their frequent occurrence as well as the fact that more than 70 (Schneider et al. 2011) planets have already been discovered in such configurations - most noteably the telluric companion of alpha Centauri B (Dumusque et al. 2012) - make them interesting targets in the search for habitable worlds. Recent studies (Eggl et al. 2012b, Forgan 2012) have shown, that despite the variations in gravitational and radiative environment, there are indeed circumstellar regions where planets can stay within habitable insolation limits on secular dynamical timescales. In this article we provide habitable zones for 19 near S-Type binary systems from the Hipparchos and WDS catalogues with semimajor axes between 1 and 100 AU. Hereby, we accounted for the…
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