Follow-up observations of the binary system $\gamma$ Cep
M. Mugrauer, S. Schlagenhauf, S. Buder, C. Ginski, and M. Fern\'andez

TL;DR
This study provides new imaging and spectroscopic data on the $b3$ Cep binary system, refining the companion's mass, orbit, and exploring the potential for additional companions, thereby enhancing understanding of this exoplanet host star system.
Contribution
The paper offers the first combined astrometric and spectroscopic analysis of $b3$ Cep B, improving orbital parameters and constraining the presence of other companions in the system.
Findings
Mass of $b3$ Cep B determined as 0.39$b1$0.03 M$_\u2099$
No additional companions detected within 155 au apart from $b3$ Cep B
Refined orbital solution for the binary system
Abstract
We present new imaging and spectroscopic observations of the exoplanet host star Cep A, and of its low-mass stellar companion Cep B. We used AstraLux/CAHA to follow the orbital motion of the companion around its primary, whose radial velocity was determined with spectra of the star, taken with the spectrograph FLECHAS at the University Observatory Jena. We measured the astrometry of Cep B relative to its primary in all AstraLux images and determined its apparent SDSS i'-band photometry, for which we obtained i'=9.840.17 mag. Using stellar evolutionary models and the Gaia parallax of the exoplanet host star, we derived the mass of Cep B to be 0.390.03 M. This is in good agreement with the mass of the companion, derived from its NIR photometry, given in the literature. With the detection limit, reached in our AstraLux images, we…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
