2011
Ref: ASTROimport-413

HD 181068: A Red Giant in a Triply Eclipsing Compact Hierarchical Triple System

Derekas, A. ; Kiss, L. L. ; Borkovits, T. ; Huber, D. ; Lehmann, H. ; Southworth, J. ; Bedding, T. R. ; Balam, D. ; Hartmann, M. ; Hrudkova, M. ; Ireland, M. J. ; Kovács, J. ; Mezo, G. ; Moór, A. ; Niemczura, E. ; Sarty, G. E. ; Szabó, G. M. ; Szabó, R. ; Telting, J. H. ; Tkachenko, A. ; Uytterhoeven, K. ; Benko, J. M. ; Bryson, S. T. ; Maestro, V. ; Simon, A. E. ; Stello, D. ; Schaefer, G. ; Aerts, C. ; ten Brummelaar, T. A. ; De Cat, P. ; McAlister, H. A. ; Maceroni, C. ; Mérand, A. ; Still, M. ; Sturmann, J. ; Sturmann, L. ; Turner, N. ; Tuthill, P. G. ; Christensen-Dalsgaard, J. ; Gilliland, R. L. ; Kjeldsen, H. ; Quintana, E. V. ; Tenenbaum, P. ; Twicken, J. D.


published in Science, 332, pp. 216 (2011)

Abstract: Hierarchical triple systems comprise a close binary and a more distant component. They are important for testing theories of star formation and of stellar evolution in the presence of nearby companions. We obtained 218 days of Kepler photometry of HD 181068 (magnitude of 7.1), supplemented by ground-based spectroscopy and interferometry, which show it to be a hierarchical triple with two types of mutual eclipses. The primary is a red giant that is in a 45-day orbit with a pair of red dwarfs in a close 0.9-day orbit. The red giant shows evidence for tidally induced oscillations that are driven by the orbital motion of the close pair. HD 181068 is an ideal target for studies of dynamical evolution and testing tidal friction theories in hierarchical triple systems.

DOI: 10.1126/science.1201762
Links: link


The record appears in these collections:
Royal Observatory of Belgium > Astronomy & Astrophysics
Science Articles > Peer Reviewed Articles



 Record created 2016-07-01, last modified 2016-07-01