Planetary nebulae seen with TESS: New and revisited short-period binary central star candidates from Cycles 1 to 4
Alba Aller, Jorge Lillo-Box, David Jones

TL;DR
This study uses TESS data to identify and analyze short-period binary candidates among central stars of planetary nebulae, expanding the known sample and exploring variability causes.
Contribution
It introduces a systematic analysis of TESS light curves for central stars of PNe, identifying new binary candidates and revisiting known binaries with high-precision data.
Findings
18 new candidate binary central stars identified
8 known binaries revisited with TESS data
12 stars show no significant variability
Abstract
High-precision and high-cadence photometric surveys such as Kepler or TESS are making huge progress not only in the detection of new extrasolar planets but also in the study of a great number of variable stars. This is the case for central stars of planetary nebulae (PNe), which have similarly benefited from the capabilities of these missions, increasing the number of known binary central stars and helping us to constrain the relationship between binarity and the complex morphologies of their host PNe. In this paper, we analyse the TESS light curves of a large sample of central stars of PNe with the aim of detecting signs of variability that may hint at the presence of short-period binary nuclei. We analysed 62 central stars of true, likely, or possible PNe and modelled the detected variability through an MCMC approach accounting for three effects: reflection, ellipsoidal modulations,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
