eclipsing binaries converting your observations into a light curve

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Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

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Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve. If you have observed the whole eclipse in one night its easy to create a light curve. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

Eclipsing Binaries

Converting your observations into a light curve

Page 2: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

If you have observed the whole eclipse in one night its easy to create a light curve

However, we often have to combine observations made on different nights, either because the eclipse takes too long, or because

the weather interrupts our observations

Page 3: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

Beta Lyrae has an orbital period of just under 13 days

Here are my observations of beta Lyrae from 2009 …

Page 4: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

Beta Lyrae magsDate Time(UT) Mag28/05/2009 23:01 3.5629/05/2009 22:37 3.8130/05/2009 00:48 3.8930/05/2009 22:29 3.9931/05/2009 22:49 3.8103/06/2009 22:40 3.6611/06/2009 22:43 4.1915/06/2009 22:43 3.7123/06/2009 23:58 3.6629/06/2009 23:45 3.5603/07/2009 22:49 3.7109/07/2009 23:50 3.7116/07/2009 00:37 3.7124/07/2009 23:33 3.5127/07/2009 22:05 3.99

Date Time(UT) Mag

31/07/2009 00:24 3.7902/08/2009 00:41 3.7113/08/2009 22:05 3.8117/08/2009 21:16 3.7620/08/2009 21:24 3.6621/08/2009 20:51 3.8127/08/2009 23:27 3.6609/09/2009 20:35 3.4312/09/2009 19:55 3.5615/09/2009 19:54 3.5318/09/2009 19:32 3.6112/10/2009 18:34 3.8912/12/2009 18:05 3.5319/12/2009 06:34 3.6620/12/2009 06:26 3.61

Page 5: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

If you simply plot this data as a light curve , the result is disappointing…

Page 6: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

Beta Lyrae in 2009

3.2

3.4

3.6

3.8

4

4.2

4.4

27/04/2009 16/06/2009 05/08/2009 24/09/2009 13/11/2009 02/01/2010

Mag

nit

ud

e

Page 7: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

What you would prefer is the next light curve showing the primary eclipse near phase 0

and a secondary eclipse near phase 0.5

Page 8: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

Beta Lyrae in 2009

3.2

3.4

3.6

3.8

4

4.2

4.4

0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1

Phase

Ma

gn

itu

de

Page 9: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

Phases

• The difference between the previous two light curves is that, whereas the first showed the calendar date, the second shows the phase (the fraction of the orbital period completed)

• In order to calculate the (predicted) phase at the time of each observation, we need to know the “orbital elements” of the system

• The place to look for these is in the General Catalogue of Variable Stars (GCVS)

Page 10: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

GCVS elements

http://www.sai.msu.su/gcvs/cgi-bin/search.htm

For beta Lyrae this gives

Epoch = 2408247.950

Period = 12.913834 days

(the Epoch is the Julian Date of a previous eclipse)

Page 11: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

Why Eclipsing Binaries are interesting

- If the orbital periods were fixed, there would be little reason to observe EBs regularly

- However, for many eclipsing binaries, the orbital period slowly changes over the years

- by comparing the observed times of eclipses with the predicted times, amateurs can help monitor how the orbital period is changing

Page 12: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

So, how do we use these elements to convert our dates and times into (predicted) phases ?

Page 13: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

Back in the 1980s …

For each observation you had to ….

• Look up the Julian Day number

• Look up the Decimal fraction of the day

• Use a pocket calculator to calculate the phase …

• Plot using graph paper

This was very time consuming and prone to errors

Page 14: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

The 1990s

• The 1990s brought us PCs and spreadsheets and made the process so much easier

• First of all, key your observations into a spreadsheet, with the dates, times and magnitudes in separate columns …

Page 15: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve
Page 16: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

Excel stores the date as a day number.

To convert it to the Julian Day Number :

type =B2+15019 in cell E2

(you will also need to use the Format drop down menu to set the Cell to General)

Then highlight cell E2, click on the bottom right hand corner of the cell and drag the mouse down through column E to repeat the calculation for the other dates

Page 17: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

E2 = B2 + 15019

Page 18: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

Next we convert the time in column C to a decimal fraction of a day

The “- 0.5” adjustment is needed because the Julian Day changes at

midday rather than midnight

Page 19: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

F2 = (HOUR(C2)*60+MINUTE(C2))/1440 - 0.5

Page 20: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

We then add together the column E and column F values to give the JD in column G

Then, in column H, we calculate the number of orbits that have taken place between the Epoch

Julian Date and the Julian Date of the observation

Page 21: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

H2 = (G2 – 8247.95) / 12.913834

Page 22: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

We only want to know how far we are through the latest orbit

so we chop off the part before the decimal point

…. and we are left with the (predicted) phase

Page 23: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

I2=MOD(H2 , 1)

Page 24: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

Having completed all rows, we copy across the magnitudes from column D to column J

Then highlight column I (phase) and column J (magnitude)

and click on the Chart Wizard icon

Page 25: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve
Page 26: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

Chart Wizard then asks which type of graph you want to plot.

Select the XY Scatter graph …

Page 27: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve
Page 28: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

…click on Next,

add a title,

click on Finish

… and Excel will plot your light curve …

Page 29: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve
Page 30: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

Unfortunately, Excel doesn’t understand Eclipsing Binaries or Magnitudes or Phases

So we have some work to do to “tidy up” the light curve …

Page 31: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

Tidying up the light curve

First right click on the vertical axis and select Format Axis from the drop down menu

Then adjust the settings ( Minimum , Maximum , Major Step ,

Values in Reverse Order , at Max value , as appropriate )

Page 32: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve
Page 33: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

Adjust the scale on the horizontal axis, and with a few more adjustments, the resulting light curve will be more like :-

Page 34: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

Beta Lyrae in 2009 (GCVS)

3.2

3.4

3.6

3.8

4

4.2

4.4

0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.0

Phase

Magnitude

Page 35: Eclipsing Binaries Converting your observations into a light curve

Comparing observations with predictions

• In the preceding light curve, primary eclipse was around phase 0.90-0.95 and secondary eclipse was near phase 0.40-0.45.

• Based on the light curve alone, primary eclipse might be slightly early or might be very late

• Observations over many decades tell us that the observed eclipses of beta Lyrae are now very out of step with the period in the GCVS – observed eclipses are later than predicted by more than 30 orbital periods !