Home > Science Articles > Peer Reviewed Articles > Dancing with the stars: a review on stellar multiplicity |
accepted to be published in Bulletin de la Société Royale des Sciences de Liège (2023)
Abstract: Stars like company. They are mostly formed in clusters and their lives are often altered by the presence of one or more companions. Interaction processes between components may lead to complex outcomes like Algols, blue stragglers, chemically altered stars, type Ia supernovae, as well as progenitors of gravitational wave sources, to cite a few. Observational astronomy has entered the era of big data, and thanks to large surveys like spatial missions Kepler, TESS, Gaia, and ground-based spectroscopic surveys like RAVE, Gaia-ESO, APOGEE, LAMOST, GALAH (to name a few) the field is going through a true revolution, as illustrated by the recent detection of stellar black holes and neutron stars as companions of massive but also low-mass stars. In this review, I will present why it is important to care about stellar multiples, what are the main large surveys in which many binaries are harvested, and finally present some features related to the largest catalogue of astrometric, spectroscopic and eclipsing binaries provided by the Non-Single Star catalogue of Gaia, which is, to date, the largest homogeneous catalogue of stellar binaries.
Keyword(s): binary stars ; stellar multiplicity ; spectroscopic binaries ; eclipsing binaries ; astrometric binaries
DOI: 10.48550/arXiv.2311.09764
Links: link
Funding: Prf-2020-033_BISTRO/Prf-2020-033_BISTRO/Prf-2020-033_BISTRO
The record appears in these collections:
Royal Observatory of Belgium > Astronomy & Astrophysics
Science Articles > Peer Reviewed Articles