Multi-technique investigation of the binary fraction among A-F type candidate hybrid variable stars discovered by Kepler
P. Lampens, Y. Fr\'emat, L. Vermeylen, \'A. S\'odor, M. Skarka, P. De, Cat, Zs. Bogn\'ar, R. De Nutte, L. Dumortier, A. Escorza, G. M. Oomen, G. Van, de Steene, D. Kamath, M. Laverick, A. Samadi, S. Triana, H. Lehmann

TL;DR
This study investigates the binary fraction among A-F type hybrid pulsators from Kepler, using spectroscopic data to identify binary systems and analyze their properties, thereby clarifying the origins of observed low frequencies.
Contribution
It provides the first homogeneous spectroscopic analysis of 50 Kepler hybrid candidates, revealing a 27% binary fraction and identifying new binary systems with orbital solutions.
Findings
27% binary fraction among the sample
Seven new binary systems with orbital solutions
Confirmation of long-period binaries via photometric analysis
Abstract
Hundreds of candidate hybrid pulsators of intermediate type A-F were revealed by the recent space missions. Hybrid pulsators allow to study the full stellar interiors, where p- and g-modes are simultaneously excited. The true hybrid stars must be identified since other processes, due to stellar multiplicity or rotation, might explain the presence of (some) low frequencies observed in their periodograms. We measured the radial velocities of 50 candidate Delta Sct - Gamma Dor hybrid stars from the Kepler mission with the Hermes/Ace spectrographs over a span of months to years. We aim to derive the fraction of binary and multiple systems and to provide an independent and homogeneous determination of the atmospheric properties and vsini for all targets. The objective is to identify the physical cause of the low frequencies. We computed 1-D cross-correlation functions (CCFs) in order to find…
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