Prospecting Period Measurements with LSST - Low Mass X-ray Binaries as a Test Case
Michael A. C. Johnson, Poshak Gandhi, Adriane P. Chapman, Luc Moreau,, Philip A. Charles, William I. Clarkson, Adam B. Hill

TL;DR
This study evaluates LSST observing strategies for measuring orbital periods of low mass X-ray binaries, demonstrating that optimized strategies significantly improve period detection rates across the Milky Way.
Contribution
It introduces a simulation framework to assess LSST's effectiveness in detecting LMXB orbital periods under various observing strategies, highlighting the importance of cadence optimization.
Findings
Baseline LSST strategy detects ~23% of LMXB periods.
Specialist strategies improve detection to ~70%.
Optimized strategies could determine periods for up to ~32% of the Milky Way's LMXB population.
Abstract
The Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) will provide for unbiased sampling of variability properties of objects with mag 24. This should allow for those objects whose variations reveal their orbital periods (), such as low mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs) and related objects, to be examined in much greater detail and with uniform systematic sampling. However, the baseline LSST observing strategy has temporal sampling that is not optimised for such work in the Galaxy. Here we assess four candidate observing strategies for measurement of in the range 10 minutes to 50 days. We simulate multi-filter quiescent LMXB lightcurves including ellipsoidal modulation and stochastic flaring, and then sample these using LSST's operations simulator (OpSim) over the (mag, ) parameter space, and over five sightlines sampling a range of possible reddening values. The…
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