Binary star population of the Sculptor dwarf galaxy
Jos\'e Mar\'ia Arroyo-Polonio, Giuseppina Battaglia, Guillaume F., Thomas, Michael J. Irwin, Alan W. McConnachie, Eline Tolstoy

TL;DR
This study measures the binary star fraction in the Sculptor dwarf galaxy and other Milky Way satellites, revealing a typical binary fraction around 55%, with implications for understanding stellar populations and dark matter estimates in these environments.
Contribution
The paper refines a method for estimating binary fractions, applies it to Sculptor and other dwarf galaxies, and provides the most precise binary fraction measurement for Sculptor to date.
Findings
Binary fraction of Sculptor is approximately 55%.
No evidence supports different binary properties in dwarf galaxies compared to the solar neighborhood.
Accounting for Roche lobe overflow is crucial in binary period distribution analysis.
Abstract
Aims: We aim to compute the binary fraction of "classical" dwarf spheroidal galaxies (dSphs) that are satellites of the Milky Way (MW). This value can offer insights into the binary fraction in environments that are less dense and more metal-poor than our own galaxy. Additionally, knowledge of the binary fraction in dwarf galaxies is important with respect to avoiding overestimations of their dark matter content, inferred from stellar kinematics. Methods: We refined an existing method from the literature, placing an emphasis on providing robust uncertainties on the value of the binary fraction. We applied this modified method to a VLT/FLAMES dataset for Sculptor, specifically acquired for the purpose of velocity monitoring of individual stars, as well as to literature datasets for other six MW "classical" dSphs. In all cases, the targeted stars were mainly red giant branch stars…
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