Radial velocity monitoring of PG 1018-047 Virtual Observatory Resource

Authors
  1. Deca J.
  2. Marsh T.R.
  3. Ostensen R.H.
  4. Morales-Rueda L.
  5. Copperwheat C.M.,Wade R.A.
  6. Stark M.A.
  7. Maxted P.F.L.
  8. Nelemans G.
  9. Heber U.
  10. Published by
    CDS
Abstract

About 50 per cent of all known hot subdwarf B stars (sdBs) reside in close (short-period) binaries, for which common-envelope ejection is the most likely formation mechanism. However, Han et al. (2002MNRAS.336..449H, 2003MNRAS.341..669H) predict that the majority of sdBs should form through stable mass transfer leading to long-period binaries. Determining orbital periods for these systems is challenging and while the orbital periods of ~100 short-period systems have been measured, there are no periods measured above 30d. As part of a large programme to characterize the orbital periods of sdB binaries and their formation history, we have found that PG 1018-047 has an orbital period of 759.8+/-5.8d, easily making it the longest period ever detected for a sdB binary. Exploiting the Balmer lines of the subdwarf primary and the narrow absorption lines of the companion present in the spectra, we derive the radial velocity amplitudes of both stars, and estimate the mass ratio M_MS_/M_sdB_=1.6+/-0.2. From the combination of visual and infrared photometry, the spectral type of the companion star is determined to be mid-K.

Keywords
  1. Spectroscopic binary stars
  2. Subdwarf stars
  3. Radial velocity
Bibliographic source Bibcode
2012MNRAS.421.2798D
See also HTML
https://cdsarc.cds.unistra.fr/viz-bin/cat/J/MNRAS/421/2798
IVOA Identifier IVOID
ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/421/2798

Access

Web browser access HTML
http://vizier.cds.unistra.fr/viz-bin/VizieR-2?-source=J/MNRAS/421/2798
https://vizier.iucaa.in/viz-bin/VizieR-2?-source=J/MNRAS/421/2798
http://vizieridia.saao.ac.za/viz-bin/VizieR-2?-source=J/MNRAS/421/2798
IVOA Table Access TAP
http://tapvizier.cds.unistra.fr/TAPVizieR/tap
Run SQL-like queries with TAP-enabled clients (e.g., TOPCAT).

History

2013-04-11T12:22:53Z
Resource record created
2013-04-11T12:22:53Z
Created
2017-06-26T11:49:37Z
Updated

Contact

Name
CDS support team
Postal Address
CDS, Observatoire de Strasbourg, 11 rue de l'Universite, F-67000 Strasbourg, France
E-Mail
cds-question@unistra.fr