No longer impossible: the self-lensing binary KIC 8145411 is a triple
Natsuko Yamaguchi, Kareem El-Badry, David R. Ciardi, David W. Latham,, Kento Masuda, Allyson Bieryla, Catherine A. Clark, Samuel S. Condon

TL;DR
This study reveals that the self-lensing binary KIC 8145411 is actually a hierarchical triple system, resolving previous misconceptions about its white dwarf mass and challenging existing formation models.
Contribution
It demonstrates that KIC 8145411 is a triple system, revises the white dwarf mass estimate, and clarifies its formation history using combined light curve, RV, and photometry analysis.
Findings
KIC 8145411 is a hierarchical triple system.
Revised WD mass to 0.53 M_sun, not an ELM.
System likely formed through unstable mass transfer.
Abstract
Five self-lensing binaries (SLBs) have been discovered with data from the \textit{Kepler} mission. One of these systems is KIC 8145411, which was reported to host an extremely low mass (ELM; ) white dwarf (WD) in a 456-day orbit with a solar-type companion. The system has been dubbed "impossible", because evolutionary models predict that WDs should only be found in tight orbits ( days). In this work, we show that KIC 8145411 is in fact a hierarchical triple system: it contains a WD orbiting a solar-type star, with another solar-type star AU away. The wide companion was unresolved in the Kepler light curves, was just barely resolved in Gaia DR3, and is resolved beyond any doubt by high-resolution imaging. We show that the presence of this tertiary confounded previous mass measurements of the WD for two reason: it…
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.
