Finding the elusive RR Lyrae companions via speckle imaging
R. Salinas, V. Kalari, G. Hajdu, Z. Prudil, C. S\'aez-Carvajal, W. Narloch, M. Catelan, S.B. Howell, K. B\k{a}kowska, R. Chini, C. Ga{\l}an, M. G\'orski, M. Ka{\l}uszy\'nski, P. Karczmarek, M. Kicia, W. Kiviaho, K. Kotysz, F. Marcadon, D. Mo\'zdzierski, H. Netzel

TL;DR
This study used high-resolution speckle imaging to identify binary companions to RR Lyrae stars, revealing a higher binary fraction than previously thought and exploring the properties of these companions.
Contribution
First high-resolution imaging survey of RR Lyrae stars that significantly increases known binary fraction estimates and analyzes companion characteristics.
Findings
Detected 10 new companions around 81 RR Lyrae stars.
Estimated binary fraction of RR Lyrae stars is between 12% and 25%.
Binary fraction for thin disc RR Lyrae stars is around 6%.
Abstract
Despite their key role in astrophysics, the binary properties of RR Lyrae stars (RRL) remain almost completely unknown since only a single RRL is confirmed as belonging to a binary system. Finding companions to RRL is difficult since most of them will be at wider orbits, given that close orbits will likely ensue mass transfer disrupting the conditions to develop stellar pulsations. These wide orbits open the possibility that RRL companions may be more easily found by high-resolution imaging. We observed 81 RRL with the speckle interferometers Zorro and 'Alopeke at the Gemini telescopes, reaching the diffraction limit of 20 mas of these 8m-class telescopes, and therefore exploring a new parameter space around RRL. We have detected 10 newly identified companions around these 81 RRL, with projected separations between 20 AU to 220 AU. An analysis of the field contamination shows that…
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