Interferometric view into RT Pav's long secondary period. binary vs oscillatory convective modes
B. Courtney-Barrer, X. Haubois, P. Wood, D. Dionese, L. Decin, C. Paladini, I. El Mellah, D. Defr\`ere, M. Ireland

TL;DR
This study uses multi-wavelength interferometry and modeling to investigate the long secondary period of RT Pav, providing evidence that oscillatory convective modes are more likely than a binary companion as the cause.
Contribution
The paper presents a comprehensive interferometric analysis and modeling that favors oscillatory convective modes over binary companions for LSPs in evolved stars.
Findings
Gaia data limits companion mass and size
Binary models inconsistent across wavelengths and with observations
Oscillatory convective dipole models fit the data well
Abstract
Long secondary periods (LSPs) occur in about one-third of evolved stars, yet their origin remains unclear. The leading explanations are oscillatory convective modes and a binary companion embedded in dust. We investigate the LSP of the red giant RT Pav using multi-wavelength VLTI interferometry (PIONIER, GRAVITY, MATISSE; 1.5-5.0 microns), obtained near the phase where a companion would appear most separated. These data, combined with photometry and Gaia DR3 astrometry, constrain possible companion masses, orbits, and photometric effects. We model the interferometric observables using uniform-disk, limb-darkened, ellipse, binary, and oscillatory convective dipole representations, supported by Monte Carlo simulations. Gaia limits any companion to a mass whose Roche-lobe volume is too small to hold the obscuring or scattering material required to reproduce the observed LSP modulation.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
