Modeling Apsidal Motion in Eclipsing Binaries using ELC
Alexander J. Dimoff, Jerome A. Orosz

TL;DR
This paper presents a method using the ELC program to model apsidal motion in eclipsing binaries, integrating Newtonian and relativistic effects to accurately predict eclipse timings and compare with standard formulas.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive modeling approach combining Newtonian, GR, and tidal effects within ELC to analyze apsidal motion in eclipsing binaries.
Findings
Derived apsidal rates agree with standard formulas for simulated systems.
The method accurately predicts eclipse timings considering multiple perturbations.
Provides a framework for analyzing real binary systems with observed eclipse data.
Abstract
Apsidal motion is the precession of the line of apsides in the orbit of a binary star due to perturbations from General Relativity (GR), tides, or third-body interactions. The rate of precession due to tidal effects depends on the interior structures of the stars, and as a result, binaries in which this precession occurs are of great interest. Apsidal motion is observed through the analysis of eclipse times, which reveal small changes in the average interval between successive primary and secondary eclipses, taking all available observed times of eclipse and yielding an estimate of the apsidal rate. Given that this is a single observed quantity, various degeneracies are unavoidably present. Ideally, one would have a model that predicts eclipse times given the orbital and stellar parameters. These parameters for a given binary could then be computed using least squares, provided a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Inertial Sensor and Navigation
