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ECLIPSING BINARIES IN OPEN CLUSTERS John Southworth Dr Pierre Maxted Dr Barry Smalley Astrophysics Group Keele University

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Page 1: ECLIPSING BINARIES IN OPEN CLUSTERS John Southworth Dr Pierre Maxted Dr Barry Smalley Astrophysics Group Keele University

ECLIPSING BINARIESIN OPEN CLUSTERS

John SouthworthDr Pierre MaxtedDr Barry Smalley

Astrophysics Group Keele University

Page 2: ECLIPSING BINARIES IN OPEN CLUSTERS John Southworth Dr Pierre Maxted Dr Barry Smalley Astrophysics Group Keele University

• EBs are good tests of theoretical stellar models– EBs in clusters have known age and metal abundance– EBs in clusters are even better tests of theoretical models

• EBs are good distance indicators– Find distance to cluster

without using MS fitting

Eclipsing binaries in open clusters

• Two EBs in one cluster:– four stars with same age

and chemical composition– excellent test of models– find metal and helium

abundance of cluster– 2004, MNRAS, 349, 547

Page 3: ECLIPSING BINARIES IN OPEN CLUSTERS John Southworth Dr Pierre Maxted Dr Barry Smalley Astrophysics Group Keele University

HD 23642 in the Pleiades

• AO Vp (Si) + Am • Period 2.46 days • mV = 5.9 mag• Shallow eclipses discovered by Torres (2003)• Munari et al (2004) distance: 131.9 ± 2.1 pc

Page 4: ECLIPSING BINARIES IN OPEN CLUSTERS John Southworth Dr Pierre Maxted Dr Barry Smalley Astrophysics Group Keele University

Distance to the Pleiades

• Possible solution: Pleiades is metal-poor– Castellani et al. (2002): Fit for Z = 0.012– But Boesgaard & Friel (1990): [Fe/H] = -0.03 ± 0.02

• Possible solution: Hipparcos parallaxes correlated– (Pinsonneault et al. 1998; Makarov 2002)

• ‘Long’ distance scale: 132 ± 3 pc– MS fitting (e.g., Percival et al. 2003)– HD 23642 (Munari et al. 2004) – Interferometric binary Atlas (Zwahlen et al. 2004)

• `Short’ distance scale: 120 ± 3 pc– Hipparcos (van Leeuwen et al. 2004)

Page 5: ECLIPSING BINARIES IN OPEN CLUSTERS John Southworth Dr Pierre Maxted Dr Barry Smalley Astrophysics Group Keele University

HD 23642 light curves

• B and V light curves from Munari et al. (2004)– We analysed them using EBOP– Theoretical limb darkening and gravity darkening– Formal errors very optimistic

Page 6: ECLIPSING BINARIES IN OPEN CLUSTERS John Southworth Dr Pierre Maxted Dr Barry Smalley Astrophysics Group Keele University

Monte Carlo analysis• Used Monte Carlo

simulations to find light curve uncertainties– Limb darkening

coefficients perturbed– rA = 0.151 ± 0.004

rB = 0.136 ± 0.007

• Problem: B and V solutions inaccurate and don’t agree well– Solution: spectroscopic

light ratio (Torres 2003)– rA = 0.154 ± 0.002

rB = 0.130 ± 0.004

Monte Carlo analysis results for HD 23642 without spectroscopic

light ratio

Page 7: ECLIPSING BINARIES IN OPEN CLUSTERS John Southworth Dr Pierre Maxted Dr Barry Smalley Astrophysics Group Keele University

HD 23642 effective temperatures

• Compare observations to ATLAS9 spectra:– Temperatures: 9750 ± 250 K 7600 ± 400 K

• uvbyβ photometry + Moon & Dworetsky (1985) calibration:– 9200 K for system 9870 K for primary only

• Infrared Flux Method: 9620 ± 280 K 7510 ± 430 K

Page 8: ECLIPSING BINARIES IN OPEN CLUSTERS John Southworth Dr Pierre Maxted Dr Barry Smalley Astrophysics Group Keele University

Pleiades is not metal-poor• HD 23642:

– MA = 2.19 ± 0.02

– MB = 1.55 ± 0.02

– RA = 1.83 ± 0.03

– RB = 1.55 ± 0.04

• Compare to Granada models:– Z ≈ 0.02

– Pleiades distance scales cannot be reconciled with low metal abundance

Granada theoretical models125 Myr Z = 0.01 0.02 0.03

Page 9: ECLIPSING BINARIES IN OPEN CLUSTERS John Southworth Dr Pierre Maxted Dr Barry Smalley Astrophysics Group Keele University

Distance to the Pleiades• Distance from luminosity + bolometric correction:

– L = 4 π R2 σ Teff4 Mbol

– Mbol + BC + V MV + V distance

• Problems:– BCs depend on theoretical model atmospheres

– Fundamental effective temperatures are needed

– Consistent solar Mbol and luminosity values needed• Girardi et al. (2000) BCs: (V filter): 139.8 ± 5.3 pc

(K filter): 138.8 ± 3.3 pc– Bessell et al. (1998) BCs give same results– BCs better in the infrared: reddening less important

metallicity less important

BCs less dependent on Teff

Page 10: ECLIPSING BINARIES IN OPEN CLUSTERS John Southworth Dr Pierre Maxted Dr Barry Smalley Astrophysics Group Keele University

Distance from surface brightness• Calibrations of surface brightness vs. colour index

– SV = surface brightness in V filter

– Φ = angular diameter (mas)

– R = linear radius of star (R)

– SV = mV - 5 log Φ

– distance = 9.3048 (R / Φ) parsecs • Distance to HD23642: 138 ± 19 pc

– Use Di Benedetto (1998) calibration of SV against (B - V)

• Problems:– HD 23642 B and V light ratios are inaccurate– B filter is sensitive to metallicity– (B - V) is not very sensitive to surface brightness– Reddening is important

Page 11: ECLIPSING BINARIES IN OPEN CLUSTERS John Southworth Dr Pierre Maxted Dr Barry Smalley Astrophysics Group Keele University

Surface brightness from temperature• Use zeroth-magnitude angular diameter Φ(m=0)

– SV = V0 - 5 log Φ so Φ(m=0) = Φ 10(0.2 m) = 0.2 SV

– Kervella et al (2004) give Φ(m=0) - log Teff calibrations

• Use 2MASS JHK photometry: IR relations better– Distance : 139.1 ± 3.5 pc– Individual uncertainties:

• Effective temperatures: 0.7 pc 1.4 pc• Stellar radii: 1.4 pc 1.5 pc• Apparent K magnitude: 1.9 pc• `Cosmic’ scatter in calibration: 1.4 pc

Page 12: ECLIPSING BINARIES IN OPEN CLUSTERS John Southworth Dr Pierre Maxted Dr Barry Smalley Astrophysics Group Keele University

The Pleiades distance is ....? • Long distance scale: 132 ± 3 pc

– main sequence fitting– study of astrometric binary Atlas

• Short distance scale: 120 ± 3 pc– Hipparcos parallaxes

• Distance to HD 23642: 139 ± 4 pc– only weakly dependent on temperatures and radii

• The Pleiades is not metal-poor– from comparison between the masses and radii

and theoretical evolutionary models

Southworth, Maxted & Smalley, astro-ph/0409507

Page 13: ECLIPSING BINARIES IN OPEN CLUSTERS John Southworth Dr Pierre Maxted Dr Barry Smalley Astrophysics Group Keele University

W W Aurigae

• A4 m + A5 m• Period 2.52 days • mV = 5.9 mag• Discovered by Solviev (1918) and Schwab (1918)• Hipparcos distance: 84.3 ± 7.3 pc

Page 14: ECLIPSING BINARIES IN OPEN CLUSTERS John Southworth Dr Pierre Maxted Dr Barry Smalley Astrophysics Group Keele University

WW Aur spectral characteristics

• Both components are Am stars– spectra show strong lines of both components

Page 15: ECLIPSING BINARIES IN OPEN CLUSTERS John Southworth Dr Pierre Maxted Dr Barry Smalley Astrophysics Group Keele University

WW Aur spectroscopic orbit• TODCOR: two-dimensional cross-correlation

– Cross-correlate against many observed template spectra– Fit spectroscopic orbits using SBOP– Choose which sets of spectra give good orbits– Average good orbits to find best orbit

• RV semiamplitudes:KA = 116.81 ± 0.23 km/sKB = 126.49 ± 0.32 km/s

– Uncertainty is standard deviation of the results from each good orbit

– SBOP uncertainties agree very well

Page 16: ECLIPSING BINARIES IN OPEN CLUSTERS John Southworth Dr Pierre Maxted Dr Barry Smalley Astrophysics Group Keele University

WW Aur light curves 1

• UBV light curves from Kiyokawa & Kitamura (1975)– 3037 datapoints scanned from paper

Page 17: ECLIPSING BINARIES IN OPEN CLUSTERS John Southworth Dr Pierre Maxted Dr Barry Smalley Astrophysics Group Keele University

WW Aur light curves 2

• uvby light curves from Etzel (1975) Master’s Thesis– 3748 datapoints on a nine-track magnetic tape

Page 18: ECLIPSING BINARIES IN OPEN CLUSTERS John Southworth Dr Pierre Maxted Dr Barry Smalley Astrophysics Group Keele University

WW Aur light curve analysis• UBV and uvby light curves fitted using EBOP

– Limb darkening coefficients adjusted

• Uncertainties from Monte Carlo analysis– Good agreement with

variation between the seven light curves:

– rA = 0.1586 ± 0.0009

– rB = 0.1515 ± 0.0009

HD 23642

WW Aur

Page 19: ECLIPSING BINARIES IN OPEN CLUSTERS John Southworth Dr Pierre Maxted Dr Barry Smalley Astrophysics Group Keele University

WW Aur effective temperatures

• Am stars so spectral analysis unreliable• Hipparcos parallax gives distance 84.3 ± 7.3 pc• Get bolometric flux

– UV fluxes from TD-1 satellite– UBVRI magnitudes– 2MASS JHK magnitudes

• Convert to separate fluxes using V light ratio • Temperatures:

– Teff (A) = 7960 ± 420 K

– Teff (B) = 7670 ± 410 K

– almost no dependence on model atmospheres

Page 20: ECLIPSING BINARIES IN OPEN CLUSTERS John Southworth Dr Pierre Maxted Dr Barry Smalley Astrophysics Group Keele University

WW Aur results

• Masses from cross-correlation against observed spectra: MA = 1.964 ± 0.007 M

MB = 1.814 ± 0.007 M

• Radii from EBOP geometrical analysis:– Gravity darkening unimportant

– Limb darkening fitted RA = 1.927 ± 0.011 R

RB = 1.841 ± 0.011 R

• Effective temperatures from Hipparcos parallax and UV-optical-IR fluxes: Teff (A) = 7960 ± 420 K

Teff (B) = 7670 ± 410 K

Page 21: ECLIPSING BINARIES IN OPEN CLUSTERS John Southworth Dr Pierre Maxted Dr Barry Smalley Astrophysics Group Keele University

• Assume common age and chemical composition for both stars in WW Aur

• Problem: no published theoretical stellar models fit the masses and the radii

Comparison with theoretical models

Page 22: ECLIPSING BINARIES IN OPEN CLUSTERS John Southworth Dr Pierre Maxted Dr Barry Smalley Astrophysics Group Keele University

Solution: Z = 0.06

Claret (2004) models fit for Z = 0.06 age 77107 Myr

Page 23: ECLIPSING BINARIES IN OPEN CLUSTERS John Southworth Dr Pierre Maxted Dr Barry Smalley Astrophysics Group Keele University

Metallic-lined eclipsing binaries

Page 24: ECLIPSING BINARIES IN OPEN CLUSTERS John Southworth Dr Pierre Maxted Dr Barry Smalley Astrophysics Group Keele University

Conclusions• EBs are excellent distance indicators

– HD 23642 gives Pleiades distance 139 ± 4 pc– Agrees with MS fitting but not Hipparcos

• Distance from surface brightness is good– Avoids bolometric corrections from model atmospheres

– Best in the infrared (reddening, Teff dependence)

• Eclipsing binaries in open clusters are very useful

• WW Aur seems to be very metal-rich– Masses and radii found to accuracies of 0.4%, 0.6%

– Teff s from Hipparcos parallax and UV-optical-IR fluxes

– Metal abundance of Z ≈ 0.06 not connected to Am spectra

Page 25: ECLIPSING BINARIES IN OPEN CLUSTERS John Southworth Dr Pierre Maxted Dr Barry Smalley Astrophysics Group Keele University

John Southworth ([email protected]) Keele University, UK