Influence of selection criteria on the interpretation of rotational behaviour of wide-binary star systems
Stephen Cookson

TL;DR
This study investigates wide binary star systems using Gaia DR3 data, demonstrating that apparent deviations from Newtonian motion are due to selection biases and external influences, reaffirming classical physics at these scales.
Contribution
The paper shows how different selection criteria affect the interpretation of wide binary dynamics and clarifies that observed anomalies are likely external effects rather than new physics.
Findings
Anomalous signals diminish with relaxed selection criteria.
No non-Newtonian motion observed within 0.5 pc when criteria are relaxed.
External influences like faint companions or flybys explain observed anomalies.
Abstract
Binary star systems are expected to follow Newtonian dynamics similarly to planetary systems. However, reports have been made of wide binary systems with separations around 0.01 pc and larger, showing potential deviations from standard Newtonian motion. This phenomenon, suggestive of the flattening of galactic rotation curves, calls for closer inspection. This study presents an analysis of wide binary stars using data from Gaia Data Release 3 (DR3), a space-based astrometry mission funded by the European Space Agency. The study compares different choices of selection criteria to examine the nature of these apparent anomalous kinematics within the solar neighbourhood. The Gaia data set furnishes detailed parameters, including radial velocity, mass, age, and binary probability in addition to standard parameters. A custom Python tool named BYNARY facilitated both data processing and…
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