Planetary nebulae seen with TESS: Discovery of new binary central star candidates from Cycle 1
A. Aller, J. Lillo-Box, D. Jones, L. F. Miranda, and S. Barcel\'o, Forteza

TL;DR
This study utilizes TESS data to discover and analyze new binary central stars in planetary nebulae, revealing diverse variability patterns and constraining companion characteristics, thereby advancing understanding of binary roles in nebula formation.
Contribution
The paper presents the first TESS-based identification of binary central stars in planetary nebulae, providing detailed variability analysis and modeling to characterize companions and their effects.
Findings
Most CSPNe show periodic variability indicative of binarity.
Detected variability includes irradiation effects, ellipsoidal variations, and possible star spots.
Constraints on companion types suggest low-mass stars or sub-stellar objects.
Abstract
It is now clear that binarity plays a crucial role in many aspects of planetary nebulae (PNe), particularly the striking morphologies they exhibit. To date, there are ~60 known bCSPNe. However, both theory and observation indicates that this represents only the tip of the iceberg, with the Galactic PN population hosting orders of magnitude more. We are involved in a search for new bCSPNe to enhance the statistical validation of the key role of binarity in the formation and shaping of PNe. New discoveries of bCSPNe and their characterization carry important implications not only for understanding PN evolution, but also for studying binary evolution and the poorly-understood common-envelope phase. We used data from the TESS satellite to search for variability in the eight CSPNe that belong to the two-minute cadence preselected targets in Cycle 1, with their available pipeline-extracted…
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