Precise radial velocities of giant stars XV. Mysterious nearly periodic radial velocity variations in the eccentric binary $\epsilon$ Cygni
Paul Heeren, Sabine Reffert, Trifon Trifonov, Ka Ho Wong, Man Hoi Lee,, Jorge Lillo-Box, Andreas Quirrenbach, Torben Arentoft, Simon Albrecht, Frank, Grundahl, Mads Fredslund Andersen, Victoria Antoci, Pere L. Pall\'e

TL;DR
This study presents precise radial velocity measurements of the giant star epsilon Cygni, revealing nearly periodic short-term variations likely caused by stellar activity or binary interactions, rather than planets.
Contribution
The paper refines the orbital parameters of the epsilon Cyg binary system and investigates the origin of short-period RV variations, suggesting they are not due to planetary companions.
Findings
Short-period RV variations are unlikely caused by planets.
The binary orbit has a high eccentricity of 0.93.
No stable orbit regions found for the proposed planetary signals.
Abstract
Using the Hamilton Echelle Spectrograph at Lick Observatory, we have obtained precise radial velocities (RVs) of a sample of 373 G- and K-giant stars over more than 12 years, leading to the discovery of several single and multiple planetary systems. The RVs of the long-period (~53 years) spectroscopic binary Cyg (HIP 102488) are found to exhibit additional regular variations with a much shorter period (~291 days). We intend to improve the orbital solution of the Cyg system and attempt to identify the cause of the nearly periodic shorter period variations, which might be due to an additional substellar companion. We used precise RV measurements of the K-giant star Cyg from Lick Observatory, in combination with a large set of RVs collected more recently with the SONG telescope, as well as archival data sets. Our Keplerian model to the RVs characterizes the…
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