Gaia's binary star renaissance
Kareem El-Badry

TL;DR
Gaia's high-precision data has revolutionized the study of binary stars, enabling new discoveries and insights into their populations, orbits, and exotic phenomena, especially for wide binaries and systems with compact objects.
Contribution
The paper reviews recent advances in binary star research enabled by Gaia, highlighting new methods, discoveries, and the potential of upcoming Gaia data releases.
Findings
Enhanced census of binary populations across the Milky Way.
Detection of wide binaries and binary candidates through astrometric noise.
Identification of binaries with non-accreting compact objects.
Abstract
Stellar multiplicity is among the oldest and richest problems in astrophysics. Binary stars are a cornerstone of stellar mass and radius measurements that underpin modern stellar evolutionary models. Binaries are the progenitors of many of the most interesting and exotic astrophysical phenomena, ranging from type Ia supernovae to gamma ray bursts, hypervelocity stars, and most detectable stellar black holes. They are also ubiquitous, accounting for about half of all stars in the Universe. In the era of gravitational waves, wide-field surveys, and open-source stellar models, binaries are coming back stronger than a nineties trend. Much of the progress in the last decade has been enabled by the Gaia mission, which provides high-precision astrometry for more than a billion stars in the Milky Way. The Gaia data probe a wider range of binary separations and mass ratios than most previous…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
