He II $\lambda$4686 emission from the massive binary system in $\eta$ Car: constraints to the orbital elements and the nature of the periodic minima
M. Teodoro (1,2,3), A. Damineli (4), B. Heathcote (5), N. D., Richardson (6,7), A. F. J. Moffat (6), L. St-Jean (6), C. Russell (7,8), T., R. Gull (1), T. I. Madura (1,9), K. R. Pollard (10), F. Walter (11), A., Coimbra (12), R. Prates (12), E. Fern\'andez-Laj\'us (13,14)

TL;DR
This study analyzes He II 4686 emission in eta Carinae during periastron, using spectroscopic data to constrain the orbital parameters and understand the emission's origin and variability.
Contribution
The paper provides a detailed spectroscopic analysis of He II 4686 emission during eta Carinae's periastron, deriving orbital parameters and proposing a model for the emission's origin and variability.
Findings
Orbital period of approximately 2023 days.
Model reproduces emission variability based on wind-wind collision dynamics.
Constraints on orbital inclination and periastron longitude.
Abstract
{\eta} Carinae is an extremely massive binary system in which rapid spectrum variations occur near periastron. Most notably, near periastron the He II line increases rapidly in strength, drops to a minimum value, then increases briefly before fading away. To understand this behavior, we conducted an intense spectroscopic monitoring of the He II emission line across the 2014.6 periastron passage using ground- and space-based telescopes. Comparison with previous data confirmed the overall repeatability of EW(He II ), the line radial velocities, and the timing of the minimum, though the strongest peak was systematically larger in 2014 than in 2009 by 26%. The EW(He II ) variations, combined with other measurements, yield an orbital period d. The observed variability of the EW(He II ) was reproduced by a…
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