The Orbit and Dynamical Mass of Polaris: Observations with the CHARA Array
Nancy Remage Evans, Gail Schaefer, Alexandre Gallenne, Guillermo, Torres, Elliot P. Horch, Richard I Anderson, John Monnier, Rachael M., Roettenbacher, Fabien Baron, Narsireddy Anugu, James W. Davidson, Jr., Pierre, Kervella, Garance Bras, Charles Proffitt, Antoine M\'erand

TL;DR
This study precisely measures the orbit and mass of Polaris using CHARA Array and speckle interferometry, revealing its higher luminosity than models predict and discussing surface spots and pulsation characteristics.
Contribution
First direct dynamical mass measurement of Polaris combining interferometry, speckle, and radial velocities, with analysis of its luminosity and surface features.
Findings
Mass of Polaris is 5.13±0.28 solar masses.
Polaris is more luminous than evolutionary models predict.
Surface spots and pulsation characteristics are discussed.
Abstract
The 30 year orbit of the Cepheid Polaris has been followed with observations by the CHARA Array (Center for High Angular Resolution Astronomy) from 2016 through 2021. An additional measurement has been made with speckle interferometry at the Apache Point Observatory. Detection of the companion is complicated by its comparative faintness--an extreme flux ratio. Angular diameter measurements appear to show some variation with pulsation phase. Astrometric positions of the companion were measured with a custom grid-based model-fitting procedure and confirmed with the CANDID software. These positions were combined with the extensive radial velocities discussed by Torres (2023) to fit an orbit. Because of the imbalance of the sizes of the astrometry and radial velocity datasets, several methods of weighting are discussed. The resulting mass of the Cepheid is 5.13…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements
