Radial velocity monitoring of Kepler heartbeat stars
Avi Shporer, Jim Fuller, Howard Isaacson, Kelly Hambleton, Susan E., Thompson, Andrej Prsa, Donald W. Kurtz, Andrew W. Howard, Ryan M. O'Leary

TL;DR
This study presents radial velocity measurements of 21 Kepler heartbeat stars, revealing their orbital parameters and supporting their role as key systems for understanding high eccentricity migration and tidal effects in eccentric binaries.
Contribution
First large sample of Kepler heartbeat stars with RV orbits measured using a single instrument, doubling previous data and enabling detailed tidal effect studies.
Findings
19 systems with well-measured Keplerian orbits
Orbital periods range from 7 to 90 days
Eccentricities range from 0.2 to 0.9
Abstract
Heartbeat stars (HB stars) are a class of eccentric binary stars with close periastron passages. The characteristic photometric HB signal evident in their light curves is produced by a combination of tidal distortion, heating, and Doppler boosting near orbital periastron. Many HB stars continue to oscillate after periastron and along the entire orbit, indicative of the tidal excitation of oscillation modes within one or both stars. These systems are among the most eccentric binaries known, and they constitute astrophysical laboratories for the study of tidal effects. We have undertaken a radial velocity (RV) monitoring campaign of Kepler HB stars in order to measure their orbits. We present our first results here, including a sample of 21 Kepler HB systems, where for 19 of them we obtained the Keplerian orbit and for 3 other systems we did not detect a statistically significant RV…
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