New inclination changing eclipsing binaries in the Magellanic Clouds
J. Jury\v{s}ek, P. Zasche, M. Wolf, J. Vra\v{s}til, D. Vokrouhlick\'y,, M. Skarka, J. Li\v{s}ka, J. Jan\'ik, M. Zejda, P. Kurf\"urst, E. Paunzen

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new method to identify compact triple star systems in the Magellanic Clouds by analyzing eclipse light curves for orbital inclination variations, resulting in the discovery of 58 new candidates.
Contribution
It presents a novel approach using photometric data and orbital precession theory to detect and characterize compact triples outside the Milky Way, expanding known stellar system catalogs.
Findings
Identified 58 new compact triple star candidates in Magellanic Clouds.
Analyzed 8 systems in detail to determine binary and third star parameters.
Provided insights into stellar formation in low-metallicity environments.
Abstract
Context: Multiple stellar systems are unique laboratories for astrophysics. Analysis of their orbital dynamics may reveal invaluable information about the physical properties of the participating stars. Unfortunately, there are only a few known and well described multiple systems, this is even more so for systems located outside the Milky Way galaxy. A particularly interesting situation occurs when the inner binary in a compact triple system is eclipsing. This is because the stellar interaction, typically resulting in precession of orbital planes, may be observable as a variation of depth of the eclipses on a long timescale. Aims: We aim to present a novel method to determine compact triples using publicly available photometric data from large surveys. Here we apply it to eclipsing binaries (EBs) in Magellanic Clouds from OGLE III database. Methods: We analyzed light curves (LCs) of…
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