Eclipsing binaries observed with the WIRE satellite I. Discovery and photometric analysis of the new bright A0IV eclipsing binary Psi Centauri
H. Bruntt, J. Southworth, G. Torres, A.J. Penny, J.V. Clausen, D.L., Buzasi

TL;DR
This study presents high-precision photometry of the bright A0IV eclipsing binary Psi Centauri, revealing detailed orbital and stellar parameters, and providing valuable data for stellar evolution models.
Contribution
First detailed photometric analysis of Psi Centauri using space-based data, determining orbital parameters, stellar radii, temperatures, and evidence of pulsations.
Findings
Psi Centauri is an eccentric eclipsing binary with e=0.55.
The orbital period is 38.8 days.
The primary shows g-mode pulsations.
Abstract
Determinations of stellar mass and radius with realistic uncertainties at the level of 1% provide important constraints on models of stellar structure and evolution. We present a high-precision light curve of the A0IV star Psi Centauri, from the star tracker on board the WIRE satellite and the Solar Mass Ejection Imager camera on the Coriolis spacecraft. The data show that Psi Cen is an eccentric eclipsing binary system with a relatively long orbital period. The WIRE light curve extends over 28.7 nights and contains 41334 observations with 2 mmag point-to-point scatter. The eclipse depths are 0.28 and 0.16 mag, and show that the two eclipsing components of Psi Cen have very different radii. As a consequence, the secondary eclipse is total. We find the eccentricity to be e=0.55 with an orbital period of 38.8 days from combining the WIRE light curve with data taken over two years from the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astro and Planetary Science
