2015
DOI: 10.1088/0004-6256/150/6/178
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KEPLERECLIPSING BINARIES WITH STELLAR COMPANIONS

Abstract: Many short-period binary stars have distant orbiting companions that have played a role in driving the binary components into close separation. Indirect detection of a tertiary star is possible by measuring apparent changes in eclipse times of eclipsing binaries as the binary orbits the common center of mass. Here we present an analysis of the eclipse timings of 41 eclipsing binaries observed throughout the NASA Kepler mission of long duration and precise photometry. This subset of binaries is characterized by… Show more

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Cited by 31 publications
(61 citation statements)
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“…There is a small displacement of the secondary eclipse from the exact phase 0.5, by ∼18.7 min, or 0.00053 P. The measurements of eclipse times, given separately for the primary and secondary by Gies et al (2015), seem to confirm that by showing a gradual diverging, which suggests apsidal motion. The RV fit was therefore done with values of e and ω fixed to those found in the LC fit.…”
Section: Kic 10191056 Amentioning
confidence: 58%
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“…There is a small displacement of the secondary eclipse from the exact phase 0.5, by ∼18.7 min, or 0.00053 P. The measurements of eclipse times, given separately for the primary and secondary by Gies et al (2015), seem to confirm that by showing a gradual diverging, which suggests apsidal motion. The RV fit was therefore done with values of e and ω fixed to those found in the LC fit.…”
Section: Kic 10191056 Amentioning
confidence: 58%
“…Having v γ, A = 0 means that the tertiary is in fact not gravitationally bound (a blend), or the period of the AB orbit is too long to see the motion in the RVs. We mentioned before that the ETVs reported by Gies et al (2015) show a small curvature, as well as a gradual diverging. We have calculated our own ETVs, which we present in Figure 16.…”
Section: The Tertiary Of Kic 10191056mentioning
confidence: 81%
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