A new photometric and dynamical study of the eclipsing binary star HW Virginis
S. B. Brown-Sevilla, V. Nascimbeni, L. Borsato, L. Tartaglia, D., Nardiello, V. Granata, M. Libralato, M. Damasso, G. Piotto, D. Pollacco, R., G. West, L. S. Colombo, A. Cunial, G. Piazza, F. Scaggiante

TL;DR
This study analyzes the eclipse timing variations of HW Virginis, revealing that proposed planetary models are unstable and emphasizing the need for careful validation of explanations for observed orbital period changes.
Contribution
The paper introduces a new global-search genetic algorithm approach to model ETVs and demonstrates the instability of previous planetary hypotheses for HW Virginis.
Findings
Previous planetary models are dynamically unstable.
New solutions fit the data but are also unstable.
Stellar mechanisms cannot fully explain the observed ETVs.
Abstract
A growing number of eclipsing binary systems of the "HW Vir" kind (i. e., composed by a subdwarf-B/O primary star and an M dwarf secondary) show variations in their orbital period, also called Eclipse Time Variations (ETVs). Their physical origin is not yet known with certainty: while some ETVs have been claimed to arise from dynamical perturbations due to the presence of circumbinary planetary companions, other authors suggest that the Applegate effect or other unknown stellar mechanisms could be responsible for them. In this work, we present twenty-eight unpublished high-precision light curves of one of the most controversial of these systems, the prototype HW Virginis. We homogeneously analysed the new eclipse timings together with historical data obtained between 1983 and 2012, demonstrating that the planetary models previously claimed do not fit the new photometric data, besides…
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