Everything that glitters is not gold: V1315 Cas is not a dormant black hole
J. Zak, D. Jones, H. M. J. Boffin, P. G. Beck, J. Klencki, J., Bodensteiner, T. Shenar, H. Van Winckel, M. Skarka, K. Arellano-C\'ordova, J., Viuho, P. Sowicka, E. W. Guenther, A. Hatzes

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and detailed analysis of the binary system V1315 Cas, revealing it is not a dormant black hole but a semi-detached interacting binary with complex evolutionary history.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed characterization of V1315 Cas, demonstrating it is not a dormant black hole but an interacting binary with specific stellar parameters and evolutionary insights.
Findings
V1315 Cas is a semi-detached binary with a 34.54-day orbit.
The primary is an evolved F-type star with signs of mass transfer.
The system is at the end of a rapid mass transfer phase, likely becoming a stripped star binary.
Abstract
The quest for quiet or dormant black holes has been ongoing since several decades. Ellipsoidal variables possibly indicate the existence of a very high-mass invisible companion and are thought to be one of the best ways to find such dormant black holes. This, however, is not a panacea as we show here with one example. We indeed report the discovery of a new semi-detached interacting binary, V1315 Cas, discovered as an ellipsoidal variable. Using data from photometric surveys (ASAS-SN, TESS) and high-resolution spectroscopy, we derived a nearly circular orbit with an orbital period of =34.54 d. The binary system consists of an evolved F-type star primary that is likely still filling its Roche lobe and a B-type star secondary. Using \textsc{phoebe}2, we derived the following masses and radii: for the primary, and $R_p =18.51^{+0.12}_{-0.07} \,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdaptive optics and wavefront sensing · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Relativity and Gravitational Theory
