"Frog-eyes" in Astronomy: Monitoring Binary Radial Velocity Variations Through A Pair of Narrow-Band Filters
Chuanjie Zheng, Yang Huang, Jifeng Liu, Hongrui Gu, Hong Wu, Youjun, Lu, Yongkang Sun, Henggeng Han, Song Wang, Timothy C. Beers, Kai Xiao, Zhirui, Li, Boweng Zhang, Yongna Mao, Zhengyang Li, and Hangxin Ji

TL;DR
The paper introduces the "Frog-eyes" system, a photometric method using narrow-band filters to efficiently monitor binary star radial velocity variations, aiming to complement spectroscopic surveys in large-scale time-domain astronomy.
Contribution
It presents a novel photometric approach with narrow-band filters to extract radial velocity curves for binary stars, reducing reliance on traditional spectroscopy.
Findings
Simulations show precise orbital parameter measurements for hot stars.
Uncertainties in semi-amplitude and eccentricity are below 10% and 0.1.
Real observations validate the method on a binary system.
Abstract
Spectroscopic observations are a crucial step in driving major discoveries in the era of time-domain surveys. However, the pace of current spectroscopic surveys is increasingly unable to meet the demands of rapidly advancing large-scale time-domain surveys. To address this issue, we propose the ``Frog-eyes" system, which employs a pair of narrow-band filters: one positioned near a strong absorption line to capture signals from Doppler shifts, and the other placed on the adjacent continuum to monitor intrinsic variations. The combination of observations from the two filters enables the extraction of radial velocity (RV) curves from a large sample of binary stars, and is particularly efficient for single-lined binaries (SB1), using photometric techniques. Comprehensive mock simulations on SB1 demonstrate that the binary orbital parameters can be precisely measured from the extracted RV…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
