The Architecture of the GW Ori Young Triple Star System and Its Disk: Dynamical Masses, Mutual Inclinations, and Recurrent Eclipses
Ian Czekala, Sean M. Andrews, Guillermo Torres, Joseph E. Rodriguez,, Eric L. N. Jensen, Keivan G. Stassun, David W. Latham, David J. Wilner,, Michael A. Gully-Santiago, Konstantin N. Grankin, Michael B. Lund, Rudolf B., Kuhn, Daniel J. Stevens, Robert J. Siverd, David James

TL;DR
This study combines ALMA observations, optical spectra, and astrometry to characterize the GW Ori triple star system, revealing stellar masses, disk inclination, orbital dynamics, and evidence of disk-related eclipses, suggesting a young age of about 1 million years.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed dynamical and structural analysis of GW Ori, including mass measurements, orbital configurations, and disk-star interactions, highlighting misaligned orbits and recurrent eclipses.
Findings
Total stellar mass: 5.29 solar masses
Orbital planes are misaligned with the disk by up to 45°
Detected recurrent 30-day eclipse events
Abstract
We present spatially and spectrally resolved Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) observations of gas and dust orbiting the pre-main sequence hierarchical triple star system GW Ori. A forward-modeling of the CO and CO =2-1 transitions permits a measurement of the total stellar mass in this system, , and the circum-triple disk inclination, . Optical spectra spanning a 35 year period were used to derive new radial velocities and, coupled with a spectroscopic disentangling technique, revealed that the A and B components of GW Ori form a double-lined spectroscopic binary with a day period; a tertiary companion orbits that inner pair with a day period. Combining the results from the ALMA data and the optical spectra with three epochs of astrometry in the literature, we constrain the…
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